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Published byJohnathan Horton Modified over 9 years ago
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Phytoplankton Michael L. Parsons Coastal Watershed Institute
Florida Gulf Coast University
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Phytoplankton (microalgae)
Diatom (Pseudo-nitzschia) Cyanobacteria (Microcystis) Diatom (Actinoptychus) Chlorophyte Dinoflagellate (Karenia brevis) Silicoflagellate Dinoflagellate (Gambierdiscus) Diatom (Chaetoceros) Haptophyte
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Overview The Good: phytoplankton are the base of the foodweb
The Bad: too much can have negative impacts The Ugly: some phytoplankton can produce toxins that can kill animals and make people sick
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Food Web
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Phytoplankton Growth Requirements
Light Nutrients (nitrogen, phosphorus, carbon, other compounds) Can serve as indicators of nutrient loading and light availability
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The Good phytoplankton fish nutrients plankton
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The Bad
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The Ugly
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Phytoplankton and the Caloosahatchee
Many factors that affect the growth of phytoplankton in the Caloosahatchee are controlled/influenced by the flow of the river. As flow increases: nutrients phytoplankton residence time phytoplankton salinity assemblage shift
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flow nutrients phytoplankton
Doering et al. 2006
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flow residence time phytoplankton
Wan et al. 2013
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Doering et al. 2006
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flow residence time phytoplankton
Wan et al. 2013
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flow salinity assemblage shift
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Andresen 2011
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Andresen 2011
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Red Tides and Caloosahatchee Discharges
Brand, unpub.
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Brown et al. 2006
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“The combined flux of N and P from TB, CH, and the Caloosahatchee River could theoretically supply 11–50% of the N and 11–57% of the P required to support growth of the measured population abundance for each of the three blooms”
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Workshop Questions What driver is the indicator sensitive to?
Nutrients, salinity, light What constitutes a healthy population of the indicator? Low/moderate cell concentrations; more diatoms and less cyanobacteria and flagellates Is the indicator a valued component of the Caloosahatchee system? Should be! What metrics are appropriate for assessing this indicator? Chlorophyll concentrations; species identifications
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Workshop Questions What are the strengths and limitations of this indicator? Chlorophyll is an easy (and strong) response variable to measure Cofounding factors (salinity and nutrients; flow and residence time) What are the relevant gaps and uncertainties in our understanding of the relationship between drivers/stressor and indicator response? Teasing out nutrient loading versus residence time Role of Caloosahatchee in red tides Could our use of this indicator be improved to address additional drivers/stressors? Yes – can help to optimize flow regimes in different conditions Next steps? River and red tides Assemblage shifts versus flow
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