2013
DOI: 10.1016/j.dsr.2013.04.007
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Phytoplankton chemotaxonomy in the Atlantic sector of the Southern Ocean during late summer 2009

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Cited by 20 publications
(21 citation statements)
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“…Prasinophytes remained at 5% or below of Chl a in summer, with Chlorophytes and Synechococcus displaying a greater abundance at certain stations instead. Latitudinal patterns displayed a coherent trend across both cruises that as you move South you switch from Haptophyte (likely Coccolithophores) dominated communities to Diatom dominated, consistent with previous observations in this region (Gibberd et al ). One station in summer displayed a markedly different phytoplankton assemblage to all other stations, station “SG” that is located close to South Georgia, which had the lowest group diversity and dominance by Diatoms of ∼ 90%, with the blooms in this region accounting for one the largest carbon sinks in the Southern Ocean (Schlitzer ), most likely as a result of DFe fertilization from the island (Nielsdóttir et al ).…”
Section: Resultssupporting
confidence: 89%
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“…Prasinophytes remained at 5% or below of Chl a in summer, with Chlorophytes and Synechococcus displaying a greater abundance at certain stations instead. Latitudinal patterns displayed a coherent trend across both cruises that as you move South you switch from Haptophyte (likely Coccolithophores) dominated communities to Diatom dominated, consistent with previous observations in this region (Gibberd et al ). One station in summer displayed a markedly different phytoplankton assemblage to all other stations, station “SG” that is located close to South Georgia, which had the lowest group diversity and dominance by Diatoms of ∼ 90%, with the blooms in this region accounting for one the largest carbon sinks in the Southern Ocean (Schlitzer ), most likely as a result of DFe fertilization from the island (Nielsdóttir et al ).…”
Section: Resultssupporting
confidence: 89%
“…Samples for pigment analysis were collected by filtering 0.5–2.0 L onto GF/F filters, before freezing and storage at −80°C until analysis on land in Villefranche, France on a HPLC Agilent Technologies 1200. Pigment analysis followed the methods of Ras et al (), with relative taxonomic abundance determined using CHEMTAX (Mackey et al ) utilizing the Southern Ocean specific pigment ratios from Gibberd et al (). The size distribution of the particle population was measured using a Beckman Coulter multisizer (20 runs at 2.0 mL per run through a 100 μ m aperture).…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Pigment composition data were standardized through root square transformation before cluster analysis utilizing multi-dimensional scaling, where similar samples appear together and dissimilar samples do not. Samples were grouped and analysed in CHEMTAX (Mackey et al, 1996) using the Southern Ocean-specific pigment ratios from Gibberd et al (2013). Multiple iterations of pigment ratios were used to reduce uncertainty in the taxonomic abundance as described in Gibberd et al (2013), with the solution that had the smallest residual used for the estimated taxonomic abundance.…”
Section: Phytoplankton Compositionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Pigment composition data were standardized through root square transformation before cluster analysis utilizing multi-dimensional scaling where similar samples appear together and dissimilar samples do not. Samples were grouped and analysed in CHEMTAX (Mackey et al, 1996) using the pigment ratios from Gibberd et al (2013). Multiple iterations of pigment ratios were used to reduce uncertainty in the taxonomic abundance as described in Gibberd et al (2013), with the solution that had the smallest residual used for the estimated taxonomic abundance.…”
Section: Pigment Analysis and Chemtaxmentioning
confidence: 99%