Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/10553/134351
Title: Seasonality of zooplankton active flux in subtropical waters
Authors: Hernandez-Leon, Santiago 
Sarmiento-Lezcano, Airam 
Couret Huertas, María 
Armengol, Laia 
Medina Suárez, Ione 
Fatira, Effrosyni 
Tuset Andujar,Victor Manuel 
Limam, Abdallahi 
Sánchez Díez De La Lastra, Antonio 
Díaz Pérez, Javier 
Landeira Sánchez, José María 
UNESCO Clasification: 251005 Zoología marina
251001 Oceanografía biológica
Keywords: Late winter bloom
Vertical distribution
Carbon export
Mesozooplankton
Transport, et al
Issue Date: 2024
Project: Desenmarañando la Estacionalidad Del Flujo Activo de Carbono en El Océano 
Sustainable management of mesopelagic resources 
Tropical and South Atlantic - climate-based marine ecosystem prediction for sustainable management 
Journal: Limnology and Oceanography 
Abstract: The biological carbon pump (BCP) is the mechanism by which the ocean transports organic matter below the mixed layer, exporting or sequestering it for years to millennia. Physical transport of dissolved and particulate organic carbon, the sinking of particles, and the carbon transported by diel and seasonal vertical migrants are the three main mechanisms of the BCP. In the study of active flux, seasonality is almost unknown and changes in ocean productivity during the annual cycle could promote differences in this transport. Here, we show the results of a cruise performed during spring in the Canary Current System, where we studied zooplankton active flux in two transects from the coastal zone off Northwest Africa toward the ocean. We measured biomass and the enzymatic activity of the electron transfer system (ETS) as a proxy for respiration in the water column down to a depth of 900 m. Compared with a previous survey during fall, we found higher values of specific ETS activity in the mesopelagic zone, promoting a higher active flux. Our results showed that the seasonality of active flux is driven not only by differences in biomass but also by differences in respiration rates in the mesopelagic zone, mainly due to differences in zooplankton body size. A review of the zooplankton active flux values around the Canary Islands showed a fourfold increase during spring compared with other seasons. This small window of higher flux should be considered in models of active carbon export in the ocean.
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10553/134351
ISSN: 0024-3590
DOI: 10.1002/lno.12689
Source: Limnology And Oceanography [ISSN 0024-3590], (2024)
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