Publicidad

Publicidad

becas.universia.netBiblioteca.Net

Buscar recursos:

Buscador Google

Resource data



Ver

Biogeochemical fluxes through mesozooplankton
Buitenhuis, Erik
Le Quere, Corinne
Aumont, Olivier
Beaugrand, Gregory
Bunker, Adrian
Hirst, Andrew
Ikeda, Tsutomu
O'Brien, Todd
Piontkovski, Sergey
Straile, Dietmar
Location: http://hdl.handle.net/2115/13694
Global biogeochemical cycles. 20(2), 2006, GB2003-
http://dx.doi.org/10.1029/2005GB002511

Mesozooplankton are significant consumers of phytoplankton, and have a significant impact on the oceanic biogeochemical cycles of carbon and other elements. Their contribution to vertical particle flux is much larger than that of microzooplankton, yet most global biogeochemical models have lumped these two plankton functional types together. In this paper we bring together several newly available data syntheses on observed mesozooplankton concentration and the biogeochemical fluxes they mediate, and perform data synthesis on flux rates for which no synthesis was available. We update the equations of a global biogeochemical model with an explicit representation of mesozooplankton (PISCES). We use the rate measurements to constrain the parameters of mesozooplankton, and evaluate the model results with our independent synthesis of mesozooplankton concentration measurements. We also perform a sensitivity study to analyze the impact of uncertainty in the flux rates. The standard model run was parameterized on the basis of the data synthesis of flux rates. The results of mesozooplankton concentration in the standard run are slightly lower than the independent databases of observed mesozooplankton concentrations, but not significantly. This shows that structuring and parameterizing biogeochemical models on the basis of observations without tuning is a strategy that works. The sensitivity study showed that by using a maximum grazing rate of mesozooplankton that is only 30% higher than the poorly constrained fit to the observations, the model mesozooplankton concentration gets closer to the observations, but mesozooplankton grazing becomes higher than what is currently accounted for. This is an indication that food selection by mesozooplankton is not sufficiently quantified at present. Despite the amount of effort that is represented by the data syntheses of all relevant processes, the good results that were obtained for mesozooplankton indicate that this effort needs to be applied to all components of marine biogeochemistry. The development of ecosystem models that better represent key plankton groups and that are more closely based on observations should lead to better understanding and quantification of the feedbacks between marine ecosystems and climate

Belongs to: Hokkaido University Collection of Scholarly and Academic Papers

Descargar SCORM

¡Sea el primero en solicitar este recurso!

Para poder solicitar este recurso debe identificarse como usuario de la biblioteca

Users rating

No hay ninguna valoración para este recurso. Sea el primero en valorar este recurso.

Detalles del recurso

Biogeochemical fluxes through mesozooplankton
Id. 5832824
Idioma inglés
Titulo Biogeochemical fluxes through mesozooplankton
Autor(es) Buitenhuis, Erik
Le Quere, Corinne
Aumont, Olivier
Beaugrand, Gregory
Bunker, Adrian
Hirst, Andrew
Ikeda, Tsutomu
O'Brien, Todd
Piontkovski, Sergey
Straile, Dietmar
Location http://hdl.handle.net/2115/13694
Global biogeochemical cycles. 20(2), 2006, GB2003-
http://dx.doi.org/10.1029/2005GB002511
Versión 1.0
Estado Final
Descripción Mesozooplankton are significant consumers of phytoplankton, and have a significant impact on the oceanic biogeochemical cycles of carbon and other elements. Their contribution to vertical particle flux is much larger than that of microzooplankton, yet most global biogeochemical models have lumped these two plankton functional types together. In this paper we bring together several newly available data syntheses on observed mesozooplankton concentration and the biogeochemical fluxes they mediate, and perform data synthesis on flux rates for which no synthesis was available. We update the equations of a global biogeochemical model with an explicit representation of mesozooplankton (PISCES). We use the rate measurements to constrain the parameters of mesozooplankton, and evaluate the model results with our independent synthesis of mesozooplankton concentration measurements. We also perform a sensitivity study to analyze the impact of uncertainty in the flux rates. The standard model run was parameterized on the basis of the data synthesis of flux rates. The results of mesozooplankton concentration in the standard run are slightly lower than the independent databases of observed mesozooplankton concentrations, but not significantly. This shows that structuring and parameterizing biogeochemical models on the basis of observations without tuning is a strategy that works. The sensitivity study showed that by using a maximum grazing rate of mesozooplankton that is only 30% higher than the poorly constrained fit to the observations, the model mesozooplankton concentration gets closer to the observations, but mesozooplankton grazing becomes higher than what is currently accounted for. This is an indication that food selection by mesozooplankton is not sufficiently quantified at present. Despite the amount of effort that is represented by the data syntheses of all relevant processes, the good results that were obtained for mesozooplankton indicate that this effort needs to be applied to all components of marine biogeochemistry. The development of ecosystem models that better represent key plankton groups and that are more closely based on observations should lead to better understanding and quantification of the feedbacks between marine ecosystems and climate
Tipo 4026288 bytes
application/pdf
Palabras clave export production
Tipo de recurso article (author version)
Tipo de Interactividad Expositivo
Nivel de Interactividad muy bajo
Audiencia Estudiante
Profesor
Autor
Estructura Atomic
Coste no
Copyright
An edited version of this paper was published by AGU. Copyright 2006 American Geophysical Union.
Formatos 4026288 bytes
application/pdf
Requerimientos técnicos Browser: Any
Relación [References] http://www.agu.org/journals/gb/
Fecha de contribución 25-oct-2007
Contacto