Abstract

Natural populations of phytoplankton were collected near the Bay of Bourgneuf, France, in spring 1982, and were subjected to natural surface irradiance outdoors. They exhibited exponential growth on time scales of a week, but significant decreases in biomass indicators such as chlorophyll a and particulate nitrogen were observed during daytime. At night, these decreases were more than compensated by increases in the same biomass variables, which could double over 12 h of darkness. These features are characteristic of phytoplankton populations in surface waters which cannot escape high irradiances, and may be representative of situations in incubation bottles held at fixed depths near the surface. Under such conditions, a decrease in biomass during daytime should not necessarily be interpreted as irreversible damage unless growth measurements are carried out over the following night hours to check for possible recovery.

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