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AME 25:43-53 (2001)
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Abstract
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Short-term temporal and spatial dynamics of bacterioplankton near Barbados in the Caribbean Sea
Keun-Hyung Choi1,*, Fred C. Dobbs1, Robert K. Cowen2
1Department of Ocean, Earth and Atmospheric Sciences, Old Dominion University, 4600 Elkhorn Ave, Norfolk, Virginia 23529, USA
2Division of Marine Biology and Fisheries, Rosenstiel School of Marine and Atmospheric Science, University of Miami, Miami, Florida 33149, USA
*E-mail: kchoi@odu.edu
ABSTRACT: To investigate temporal (ca 1 mo) and spatial dynamics of bacterioplankton in the Caribbean Sea, time-series measurements of chlorophyll a concentration, bacterial abundance, and thymidine incorporation rate were performed at 6 stations
near Barbados. In addition, a series of incubation experiments was carried out with seawater samples collected from various depths and stations to determine bacterial growth rates and removal rates by bacterivory. Vertically integrated phytoplankton and
bacterioplankton biomasses averaged 1290 and 1200 mg C m-2, respectively, and heterotrophic bacterial production was 106 mg C m-2, with in situ bacterial growth of 0.1 d-1. Approximately halfway through the sampling
period, surface salinity dropped by as much as 4 following the arrival of water from the Amazon River. No subsequent change, however, was noted in chlorophyll a concentration, bacterial abundance, or bacterial production. Averaged bacterial growth
and bacterivory determined from bottle incubation experiments were 0.6 and 0.5 d-1, respectively, suggesting that predation was a major sink of daily bacterial biomass production. Both regression analysis of bacterial biomass and production
and measurements of growth and bacterivory from incubation experiments suggest that top-down processes control bacterioplankton dynamics to a greater degree than bottom-up processes.
KEY WORDS: The Caribbean Sea · Bacterial growth · Bacterivory · Amazon River discharge
Full text in pdf format
Published in AME Vol.
25, No. 1
(2001) on August 10
Print ISSN: 0948-3055; Online ISSN: 1616-1564.
Copyright © Inter-Research, Oldendorf/Luhe, 2001
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