Abstract

Rates of primary production, N03- uptake, and NH,l uptake by phytoplankton were measured in the marginal ice zone of the Weddell Sea in austral spring 1983 and autumn 1986. In spring Chl concentrations averaged 3 pg liter-‘, primary productivity 490 mg C m-2 d-l, and surface phytoplankton growth rates 0.30 doublings d-l. In autumn these rates were all much lower, averaging 0.14 pg liter- l, 126 mg C m-2 d-l, and 0.14 doublings d-l. During both seasons NH,+ was consistently the preferred source of N, but because of the much greater availability of N03- in the euphotic zone (21-28 PM NO,- vs. -0.4 yM NH,+ during both seasons), N03- uptake rates generally equaled or exceeded those of NH, +. Vertically integrated&ratios (the ratio of NO3- uptake to the sum of NO,- plus NH,+ uptake) averaged 0.52 (range from 0.35 to 0.70) in spring and 0.72 (range from 0.60 to 0.84) in autumn. In 1983 we observed sharply elevated relative preference indices for NH,+ whenever the ambient NH,+ concentration was ~0.3 PM, which we interpret as evidence that Antarctic phytoplankton growing at NH.,+ concentrations CO.3 PM have the ability to increase their rate of NH,+ uptake rapidly in response to increased availability. We estimate the new production of the marginal ice zone to be at least 49 g C m-2 yr-1 for the NovemberMarch period. This value supports previous findings that the ice edge is the main site of production in the Southern Ocean and that it is likely to dominate the annual cycle of organic matter flux from the euphotic zone.

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