The rapid response of phytoplankton communities to environmental changes makes this compartment one of the most important biological variable to consider in dealing with ecology and trophodynamic of coastal areas, especially in relation with ongoing climate changes and increased human pressures. In the last 30 years, the use of chemotaxonomy has improved the capability to detect phytoplankton community composition in terms of chemofunctional groups, especially for small size species requiring specific expertise and techniques, as well as time-consuming observation with light microscope. In this study, the temporal variability of chemotaxonomic functional groups has been investigated in surface waters of a LTER station in the Gulf of Naples over 12-year weekly sampling activities (2003–2015). Data reveal increasing trends in the percentage contribution of diatoms, prasinophytes, cryptophytes to the total phytoplankton biomass, while other groups show a decreasing trend. Nevertheless, strong differences in the intervals of periodicity for each chemofunctional group have emerged, both in terms of timescale and strength of periodicity over time, implying that temporal dynamics of groups were not stationary over the time and that they have different relationships with environmental variability. Our results contribute to enrich scientific knowledge on the ecology of this LTER site and underline the importance of chemotaxonomy as a monitoring tool in coastal marine systems.
A CHEMTAX‐derived phytoplankton community structure during 12‐year observations in the Gulf of Naples (LTER‐MC) / Saggiomo, Maria; Bolinesi, Francesco; Brunet, Christophe; Passarelli, Augusto; Margiotta, Francesca; Saggiomo, Vincenzo; Mangoni, Olga. - In: MARINE ECOLOGY. - ISSN 0173-9565. - (2023). [10.1111/maec.12745]
A CHEMTAX‐derived phytoplankton community structure during 12‐year observations in the Gulf of Naples (LTER‐MC)
Bolinesi, FrancescoCo-primo
;Brunet, Christophe;Saggiomo, Vincenzo;Mangoni, Olga
2023
Abstract
The rapid response of phytoplankton communities to environmental changes makes this compartment one of the most important biological variable to consider in dealing with ecology and trophodynamic of coastal areas, especially in relation with ongoing climate changes and increased human pressures. In the last 30 years, the use of chemotaxonomy has improved the capability to detect phytoplankton community composition in terms of chemofunctional groups, especially for small size species requiring specific expertise and techniques, as well as time-consuming observation with light microscope. In this study, the temporal variability of chemotaxonomic functional groups has been investigated in surface waters of a LTER station in the Gulf of Naples over 12-year weekly sampling activities (2003–2015). Data reveal increasing trends in the percentage contribution of diatoms, prasinophytes, cryptophytes to the total phytoplankton biomass, while other groups show a decreasing trend. Nevertheless, strong differences in the intervals of periodicity for each chemofunctional group have emerged, both in terms of timescale and strength of periodicity over time, implying that temporal dynamics of groups were not stationary over the time and that they have different relationships with environmental variability. Our results contribute to enrich scientific knowledge on the ecology of this LTER site and underline the importance of chemotaxonomy as a monitoring tool in coastal marine systems.File | Dimensione | Formato | |
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