Abstract

ABSTRACT The distribution and ecology of autotrophic pico- and nanoplankton were studied in the warm core eddy-affected northern Bay of Bengal (BoB) during the peak south-west monsoon of 2012. Small phototrophs showed diverse response patterns to the contrasting environmental setting in the northern BoB during the south-west monsoon. The convergence of surface waters in the eddy-influenced region was evidenced in terms of a deeper mixed layer and lower concentrations of . Synechococcus and picoeukaryotes were found to be more abundant in coastal waters as compared with the warm core eddy-influenced and offshore waters. Prochlorococcus was more abundant in the eddy-influenced and the offshore regions possibly as a consequence of their ability to survive in low-nutrient/oligotrophic waters. The abundance of Synechococcus increased noticeably in the coastal and subsurface waters due to their affinity towards higher concentrations of nutrients. The present data therefore support the view of a community shift induced by warm core water eddies and show their importance in promoting primary production by Prochlorococcus in the mixed layers of the BoB.

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