Arctic Report Card 2020: Arctic Ocean Primary Productivity: The Response of Marine Algae to Climate Warming and Sea Ice Decline Arctic Ocean Primary Productivity: The Response of Marine Algae to Climate Warming and Sea Ice Decline
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Autotrophic single-celled algae living in sea ice (ice algae) and water column (phytoplankton) are the main primary producers in the Arctic Ocean. Through photosynthesis, they transform dissolved inorganic carbon into organic material. Consequently, primary production provides a key ecosystem service by providing energy to the entire food web in the oceans. Primary productivity is strongly dependent upon light availability and the presence of nutrients, and thus is highly seasonal in the Arctic. The melting and retreat of sea ice during spring are strong drivers of primary production in the Arctic Ocean and its adjacent shelf seas, owing to enhanced light availability and stratification (Barber et al. 2015; Leu et al. 2015; Ardyna et al. 2017). Recent studies have emphasized that primary production occurs under lower light conditions and earlier in the seasonal cycle than previously recognized (Randelhoff et al. 2020). Other studies suggest that increased nutrient supply have also influenced overall production (Henley et al. 2020; Lewis et al. 2020). Furthermore, while declines in Arctic sea ice extent over the past several decades (see essay Sea Ice) have contributed substantially to shifts in primary productivity throughout the Arctic Ocean, the response of primary production to sea ice loss has been both seasonally and spatially variable (e.g., Tremblay et al. 2015; Hill et al. 2018). 2020 Grants Nos. 1702137 1917434 OAR (Oceanic and Atmospheric Research) CIRES (Cooperative Institute for Research in Environmental Sciences) Submitted https://doi.org/10.25923/vtdn-2198 Public Domain 1876
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NOAA
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2023-03-03



