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The beam attenuation to chlorophyll ratio: an optical index of phytoplankton physiology in the surface ocean?
Authors:Michael J Behrenfeld  Emmanuel Boss
Institution:a National Aeronautics and Space Administration, Goddard Space Flight Center, Code 971, Building 22, Greenbelt, MD 20771, USA;b School of Marine Sciences, 209 Libby Hall, University of Maine, Orono, ME 04469-5741, USA
Abstract:The particulate beam attenuation coefficient (cp) is proportional to the concentration of suspended particles in a size domain overlapping that of the phytoplankton assemblage. cp is largely insensitive to changes in intracellular chlorophyll concentration, which varies with growth irradiance (a process termed ‘photoacclimation’). Earlier studies have shown that the ratio of cp:chlorophyll (i.e., cp*) exhibits depth-dependent changes that are consistent with photoacclimation. Similar relationships may likewise be expected in the horizontal and temporal dimensions, reflecting changes in mixing depth, incident irradiance, and light attenuation. A link between cp* and more robust photoadaptive variables has never been explicitly tested in the field. Here we use five historical field data sets to directly compare spatial and temporal variability in cp* with two independent indices of photoacclimation: the light-saturated, chlorophyll-normalized photosynthetic rate, Pbopt, and the light-saturation index, Ek. For the variety of oceanographic conditions considered, a first-order correlation emerged between cp* and Pbopt or Ek. These simple empirical results suggest that a relationship exists between a bio-optical variable that can potentially be retrieved remotely (cp*) and physiological variables crucial for estimating primary productivity in the sea.
Keywords:Beam Attenuation  Phytoplankton  Photosynthesis
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