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Origin and maintenance of high nitrate condition in the equatorial Pacific, a biological-physical model study

Posted on:1996-10-30Degree:Ph.DType:Thesis
University:Duke UniversityCandidate:Chai, FeiFull Text:PDF
GTID:2460390014986566Subject:Biological oceanography
Abstract/Summary:
A physical-biological model was developed for the equatorial Pacific Ocean. It was used to investigate the physical and biological causes for high nutrient condition in the equatorial Pacific. At 0;Model experiments showed that iron limitation of phytoplankton is not necessary for maintenance of a high-nutrient plume; that is, the plume of high nitrate water can be generated solely by physics. However, model results indicated that iron limitation determined the concentration level of nitrate in the nutrient-rich plume and created north-south asymmetry in the nutrient fields. Model results also suggested that if the equatorial Pacific Ocean were micronutrient replete, nitrate concentration would be reduced by half from its present value. The zooplankton grazing hypothesis was tested by reducing or enhancing the maximum zooplankton grazing rate. Model results suggested that the ratio of the maximum phytoplankton growth rate to the maximum zooplankton grazing rate should be between 0.5 and 0.75.;Interannual variations in the equatorial Pacific Ocean were simulated. In the model as in nature strong trade winds create the west-east asymmetry of the upper ocean heat and nitrate content which set up the salient zonal characteristics of the basinwide ecosystem in the equatorial Pacific Ocean. A strong El Nino event completely eliminated the basinwide west-east asymmetry, while a La Nina reinforced such asymmetry. The modeling results support the interpretation of Barber (1988) concerning the role of zonal asymmetry in determining the equatorial productivity gradient. The shift-up phenomenon described by MacIsaac et al. (1985) may constrain nitrate concentrations during the overshoot period, which would explain why the model without "shifted-up" rates predicts nitrate concentrations higher than the observed concentrations.
Keywords/Search Tags:Model, Equatorial pacific, Nitrate
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