Abstract

Using mathematical model, we tested three hypotheses of bloom regulation mechanisms for dominant phytoplankton species in the northeastern Black Sea. The model is based on the concept of intracellular regulation using the Droop equation, and values of the model constants that satisfy the conditions of domination are found. The bloom of the small-cell diatom Pseudo-nitzschia pseudodelicatissima is due to higher specific growth rates than other species in early spring. The half-saturation constants and minimum quotas for mineral nutrition elements (nitrogen and phosphorus) are also relatively high. In late spring and early summer, the bloom of coccolithophore Emiliania huxleyi is usually recorded. Prerequisites are a low half-saturation constant for nitrogen uptake and minimum quota for this nutrient. The third mechanism gains strength in the summer with the deepening of seasonal thermocline and the dominance of large-cell diatoms. It was shown that for the supremacy of large diatom Proboscia alata, it is necessary to have low half-saturation constants for the phosphorus uptake and minimum quotas for this nutrient.

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