Abstract

The relationship between chlorophyll a and phytoplankton biomass (organic carbon content) is highly variable as is the yield of in vivo fluorescence per unit chlorophyll. Thus, vertical profiles of chlorophyll or in vivo fluorescence must be interpreted with caution if their ecological significance is to be established. Although the variability of carbon-to-chlorophyll ratios and fluorescence yield is large, much of it can be anticipated, corrected for, and usefully interpreted. Vertical profiles from different regions of the sea are presented; each has a deep chlorophyll maximum, but the probable mechanisms of their formation and maintenance differ widely. Most vertical distributions of chlorophyll can be explained by the interaction between hydrography and growth, behavior, or physiological adaptation of phytoplankton with no special consideration of grazing by herbivores, even though vertical distributions of epizooplankton are not uniform. The interaction between vertical profiles of zooplankton and chlorophyll will be better understood when the relationships between chlorophyll and phytoplankton biomass in those profiles is determined.Key words: chlorophyll a, fluorescence, phytoplankton, vertical structure

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