Publication
Title
The impact of temporal variability in light-climate on time-averaged production and a phytoplankton bloom in a well-mixed estuary
Author
Abstract
Phytoplankton primary production (PP) in turbid estuaries is often limited by light-availability. Two important factors altering light-climate are solar irradiance at the water surface and exponential light-extinction coecient within the water column. Additionally, the depth of the water body changes the light-climate and corresponding PP by altering the ratio of the euphotic and mixing depth in a well-mixed estuary. These three parameters are highly variable yet are often assumed to be constant by both experimental scientists and modelers because of a lack of data or to reduce complexity. Because assuming constant parameters introduces an error, we utilize an idealized model of depth-integrated primary production to analyze the (individual) impact of temporal variability in these three parameters. We only consider the main tidal and solar constituents in temporal variability of the forcings and apply a second-order moment approximation to analyze the bias introduced to time-averaged PP estimates by neglecting temporal uctuations. We demonstrate that the sign and magnitude of this bias are system-specic and depend on two non-dimensional parameters that characterize the system. The rst is equivalent to the ratio of mixing and photic depth. The second accounts for typical incident irradiance and the photosynthetic parameters of the phytoplankton population present. To demonstrate the applicability of our approach, we apply the model to two cases in the Scheldt estuary (Belgium) in the brackish and freshwater part. In the rst application, we study the impact of uctuations on phytoplankton in dynamic equilibrium, where biomass is assumed to be constant. We show that variability in solar irradiance has the largest impact on time-averaged PP in dynamic equilibrium, resulting in a 30 percent decrease compared to time-invariant forcing. By comparing with a numerical integrator, we show that a second-order moment approximation correctly predicts the order of magnitude of the impact of temporal variability of the individual parameters. In the second application, we study the impact of uctuations on unbounded exponential phytoplankton growth. Also here, uctuations in solar irradiance have the largest impact and lead to a signicant decrease in exponential growth. In this case study, we show that temporal uctuations delay the onset of the biomass by two weeks and decrease the biomass by a factor 14 after two weeks compared to time invariant forcing. Additionally, we show that the temporal uctuations induce low-frequency variability in phytoplankton biomass with similar periodicity as the spring-neap cycle, making it dicult to observe these phenomena in real-world time series.
Language
English
Source (journal)
Ecological modelling. - Amsterdam
Publication
Amsterdam : 2020
ISSN
0304-3800
DOI
10.1016/J.ECOLMODEL.2020.109287
Volume/pages
436 (2020) , 19 p.
Article Reference
109287
ISI
000579482500007
Medium
E-only publicatie
Full text (Publisher's DOI)
Full text (open access)
Full text (publisher's version - intranet only)
UAntwerpen
Faculty/Department
Research group
Project info
Global Ecosystem Functioning and Interactions with Global Change.
Publication type
Subject
Affiliation
Publications with a UAntwerp address
External links
Web of Science
Record
Identifier
Creation 25.09.2020
Last edited 02.10.2024
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