Paul Falkowski

63
The co-evolution of oceanic ecosystems and physical circulation Paul G. Falkowski Environmental Biophysics and Molecular Ecology Program Institute of Marine and Coastal Sciences And Department of Geology Rutgers University New Brunswick, New Jersey Email: [email protected] WOCE San Antonio November 20, 2002

Transcript of Paul Falkowski

Page 1: Paul Falkowski

The co-evolution of oceanic ecosystems and physical

circulation

Paul G. Falkowski

Environmental Biophysics and Molecular Ecology Program

Institute of Marine and Coastal Sciences

And Department of Geology

Rutgers University

New Brunswick, New Jersey

Email: [email protected]

WOCE San Antonio November 20, 2002

Page 2: Paul Falkowski
Page 3: Paul Falkowski
Page 4: Paul Falkowski

THE GLOBAL SCALE

OCEAN CIRCULATIONINFLUENCE ON

Photosynthetic Biomass, Primary and Export Production

Page 5: Paul Falkowski
Page 6: Paul Falkowski

FROM A POOL TO A FLUX

MODELS OF NET PRIMARY PRODUCTION

Page 7: Paul Falkowski
Page 8: Paul Falkowski
Page 9: Paul Falkowski

“Figure 9.10 A plot showing the correlation between external nutrient concentration (represented, in this case, by NO 3) and the maximum quantum yield for photosynthetic carbon fixation. The data were obtained from three regions in the North Atlantic: circles are from an upwelling region off norhwest Africa, squares are from a transition region, and triangles are from an oligotrophic region. (Data courtesy of Marcel Babin and Andre Morel)

Page 10: Paul Falkowski
Page 11: Paul Falkowski
Page 12: Paul Falkowski
Page 13: Paul Falkowski
Page 14: Paul Falkowski

EXPORT PRODUCTION

ADDING UNCERTAINTY

Page 15: Paul Falkowski
Page 16: Paul Falkowski
Page 17: Paul Falkowski
Page 18: Paul Falkowski

TURBULENCE, EDDY PUMPING AND PRIMARY

PRODUCTIONTHE MESOSCALE MATTERS!

Page 19: Paul Falkowski

QuickTime™ and a decompressor

are needed to see this picture.

Page 20: Paul Falkowski

FAST REPETITION RATE FLUOROMETRY

A peek into the photophysiological response of phytoplankton to

mesoscale turbulent mixing processes

Page 21: Paul Falkowski
Page 22: Paul Falkowski
Page 23: Paul Falkowski
Page 24: Paul Falkowski

Depth (m

)

Distance

Page 25: Paul Falkowski

Distance

Page 26: Paul Falkowski

Distance

Page 27: Paul Falkowski

Distance

Page 28: Paul Falkowski

Figure 1 A schematic representation of the eddy upwelling mechanism. The solid line depicts the vertical deflection of an individual isopycnal caused by the presence of two adjacent eddies of opposite sign. The dashed line indicates how the isopycnal might be subsequently perturbed by interaction of the two eddies. I 0 represents incident solar

radiation, and 1% I 0 the base of the euphotic zone.

Page 29: Paul Falkowski
Page 30: Paul Falkowski

PHYSICAL SELCTION OF PHYTOPLANTKON TAXA

NOT ALL CHLOROPHYLL IS THE SAME: THE ‘FUNCTIONAL GROUP’ ARGUMENT AND

MARGALEF’S MANDALA

Page 31: Paul Falkowski
Page 32: Paul Falkowski

 

 

 

 

 

 

Page 33: Paul Falkowski
Page 34: Paul Falkowski
Page 35: Paul Falkowski
Page 36: Paul Falkowski
Page 37: Paul Falkowski
Page 38: Paul Falkowski

2´ 10- 7 4´ 10- 7 6´ 10- 7 8´ 10- 7 1´ 10- 6

0.25

0.5

0.75

1

1.25

1.5

1.75

Cell N quota

Growth rate, d-1

Diatom

Cocco

Droop model

Page 39: Paul Falkowski
Page 40: Paul Falkowski

0max,iiiiiQQQμμ⎛⎞−=⎜⎟⎝⎠

iiiiidNNmNdtμ=⋅−⋅

max,iiiRkRρρ⋅=+

()0max,iiiidQQQdtρμ=− −⋅

0()iidRDRRNdtρ=⋅−−⋅

max,*0max,max,max,max,iiiiiiiiiiiKmRmµQmμρμρ⋅⋅=⋅−⋅−⋅⋅

Symbol Units Meaning

State variablesN cell L-1 Population density R µmol L-1 Resource availability Q µmol cell-1 Cell quota

Physiological functionρ µmol cell-1 h-1 Uptake rate

ParametersD h-1 Dilution rate R0 µmol L-1 Constant nutrient inflowing rate µmax h-1 Maximal growth rate

K µmol cell-1 Growth rate half saturation constQ0 µmol cell-1 Minimal cell quota

Notational conventions i Subscript to distinguish terms pertaining to a given species

t h Time

Droop Model

When equilibrium is reached between loss and growth rates, there will be a superior competitor, which has the smaller resource requirement (R i*) (Tilman 1977).

Page 41: Paul Falkowski
Page 42: Paul Falkowski
Page 43: Paul Falkowski

THE OCEANIC FAX MACHINE

TURBULENCE ON GEOLOGICAL TIME SCALES

Page 44: Paul Falkowski
Page 45: Paul Falkowski
Page 46: Paul Falkowski
Page 47: Paul Falkowski
Page 48: Paul Falkowski
Page 49: Paul Falkowski
Page 50: Paul Falkowski
Page 51: Paul Falkowski
Page 52: Paul Falkowski
Page 53: Paul Falkowski

CIRCULATION AS A GENETIC ISOLATING

PROCESSSPECIATION AND SELECTION IN

THE MODERN OCEAN

Page 54: Paul Falkowski

PCR amplification (SSU rDNA) ofCoccolithus pelagicus

from 500 to … 1 cell.

Crtl+

1 105 50 100 500

Calcidiscusleptoporus

100200

300...

Page 55: Paul Falkowski

11 12 27 28 78 131 43 NZ SA

0.01

B28

27

78

12

43

131

SA

11

NZ

A

C

Fig. 6

Page 56: Paul Falkowski
Page 57: Paul Falkowski
Page 58: Paul Falkowski

CONCLUSIONS

• THE OCEAN IS FUNDAMENTALLY A “BOTTOM UP” SYSTEM, HENCE,

• TO THE EXTENT THAT THERMOHALINE CIRCULATION BRINGS NUTRIENTS INTO THE UPPER OCEAN, TO FIRST ORDER IT DCONTROLS THE DISTRIBUTION AND MAGNITUDE OF PHYTOPLANKTON BIOMASS, AS WELL AS NET AND EXPORT PRODUCTION

Page 59: Paul Falkowski

• ON LONGER TIME SCALES, GLOBAL OCEAN CIRCULATION DISTRIBUTES AND GENETICALLY ISOLATES PHYTOPLANKTON – IT IS AN EVOLUTIONARY SELECTION MECHANISM ON TIME SCALES OF CENTURIES TO MILLIONS OF YEARS

• POPULATIONS OF PHYTOPLANKTON NEVER SEE OCEAN CIRCULATION; THEY EXPERIENCE MESOSCALE MIXING PROCESSES, INCLUDING EDDIES, FRONTS, AND COASTAL UPWELLING.

• MESOSCALE PROCESSES EXERT STRONG CONTROLS ON LOCAL SELECTION INDIVIDUAL TAXA – WE ARE STILL LEARNING HOW THESE CONTROLS WORK.

Page 60: Paul Falkowski

CHALLENGES FOR THE FUTURE

1. THE MESOSCALE

2. PALEOPHYSICAL OCEANOGRAPHY

3. INTEGRATING OCEAN CIRCULATION WITH EARTH SYSTEMS PROCESSES

Page 61: Paul Falkowski

OUR FUTURE

HUMANS HAVE ESCAPED THE RED QUEEN CONTROL– BUT

ARE WE IN CONTROL OF OUR DESTINY?

Page 62: Paul Falkowski
Page 63: Paul Falkowski

THANKS TO

DENNIS MCGUILLICUDDY

SCOTT DONEY

SASHA TOZZI

ELENA LITCHMAN

MICHAEL BEHRENFELD

ZBIGNIEW KOLBER

EDWARD LAWS

NASA, NSF, ONR AND DOE