Home Benthic microalgal production in the Arctic: applied methods and status of the current database
Article
Licensed
Unlicensed Requires Authentication

Benthic microalgal production in the Arctic: applied methods and status of the current database

  • Ronnie N. Glud , Jana Woelfel , Ulf Karsten , Michael Kühl and Søren Rysgaard
Published/Copyright: October 30, 2009
Botanica Marina
From the journal Volume 52 Issue 6

Abstract

The current database on benthic microalgal production in Arctic waters comprises 10 peer-reviewed and three unpublished studies. Here, we compile and discuss these datasets, along with the applied measurement approaches used. The latter is essential for robust comparative analysis and to clarify the often very confusing terminology in the existing literature. Our compilation demonstrates that i) benthic microalgae contribute significantly to coastal ecosystem production in the Arctic, and ii) benthic microalgal production on average exceeds pelagic productivity by a factor of 1.5 for water depths down to 30 m. We have established relationships between irradiance, water depth and benthic microalgal productivity that can be used to extrapolate results from quantitative experimental studies to the entire Arctic region. Two different approaches estimated that current benthic microalgal production in the Arctic is between 1.1 and 1.6×107 tons C year-1. Climate change is expected to increase the overall primary production and affect the balance between pelagic and benthic productivity in the Arctic. It is therefore imperative to get better quantitative understanding of the relationship between increased freshwater run-off, shrinking sea-ice cover, light availability and benthic primary production to assess future impact on the Arctic food web and trophic coupling.


Corresponding author

Received: 2009-2-23
Accepted: 2009-6-8
Published Online: 2009-10-30
Published in Print: 2009-12-01

©2009 by Walter de Gruyter Berlin New York

Articles in the same Issue

  1. Guest introduction
  2. Biology of polar benthic algae
  3. Environment, biogeography and biodiversity
  4. The abiotic environment of polar marine benthic algae
  5. Biodiversity, biogeography and zonation of marine benthic micro- and macroalgae in the Arctic and Antarctic
  6. Notes on the systematics and biogeographical relationships of Antarctic and sub-Antarctic Rhodophyta with descriptions of four new genera and five new species
  7. Chemical ecology
  8. Defenses of polar macroalgae against herbivores and biofoulers
  9. Field studies on deterrent properties of phlorotannins in Antarctic brown algae
  10. Primary production and ecophysiology
  11. Benthic microalgal production in the Arctic: applied methods and status of the current database
  12. Microphytobenthic biomass along gradients of physical conditions in Arctic Kongsfjorden, Svalbard
  13. Phenology and seasonal physiological performance of polar seaweeds
  14. Light and temperature demands of marine benthic microalgae and seaweeds in polar regions
  15. Freezing tolerance and photosynthetic performance of polar seaweeds at low temperatures
  16. Polar benthic algae in a changing world
  17. Impact of oceanic warming on the distribution of seaweeds in polar and cold-temperate waters
  18. Physiological responses of polar benthic algae to ultraviolet radiation
  19. Drivers of colonization and succession in polar benthic macro- and microalgal communities
  20. Conclusion and outlook
  21. Future perspectives on the investigation of polar benthic algae
  22. Meetings
  23. Meetings
  24. Reviewer acknowledgement Bot. Mar. volume 52 (2009)
  25. Reviewer acknowledgement Bot. Mar. volume 52 (2009)
  26. Contents index Bot. Mar. volume 52 (2009)
  27. Contents index Bot. Mar. volume 52 (2009)
  28. Author index Bot. Mar. volume 52 (2009)
  29. Author index Bot. Mar. volume 52 (2009)
  30. Genus/Species index Bot. Mar. volume 52 (2009)
  31. Genus/Species index Bot. Mar. volume 52 (2009)
Downloaded on 17.9.2025 from https://www.degruyterbrill.com/document/doi/10.1515/BOT.2009.074/html
Scroll to top button