Critical Depth

This article is about the Oceanography term. For the video game, see Critical Depth (video game).

In biological oceanography, 'Critical Depth' is defined as a hypothesized surface mixing depth at which phytoplankton growth is precisely matched by losses of phytoplankton biomass within this depth interval.[1] This concept is useful for understanding the initiation of phytoplankton blooms.

History

Critical depth as an aspect of biological oceanography was introduced in 1935 by Gran and Braarud.[2] It became prominent in 1953 when Harald Sverdrup published the "Critical Depth Hypothesis" based on observations he had made in the North Atlantic on the Weather Ship 'M'.[3] He theorized that spring phytoplankton blooms are triggered when the mixed layer depth becomes shallower than the critical depth. Since 1953, further investigation and research has been conducted to better define the critical depth and its role in initiating spring phytoplankton blooms. Recent analysis of satellite data suggest that the theory does not explain all spring blooms, particularly the North Atlantic spring bloom. Several papers have appeared recently that suggest a different relationship between the mixed layer depth and spring bloom timing.[1][4][5]

Definition

Sverdrup defines the critical depth at which integrated photosynthesis equals integrated respiration.[3] This can also be described as the depth at which the integral of net growth rate over the water column becomes zero. The net growth rate equals the gross photosynthetic rate minus loss terms. Gross photosynthesis exponentially decays from a maximum near the surface to approach zero with depth. It is affected by the amount and angle of solar radiation and the clarity of the water. The loss rate is the sum of cellular respiration, grazing, sinking, advection, viral lysis, and mortality. In his hypothesis, Sverdrup made the approximation that the loss rate for a phytoplankton community is constant at all depths and times.

The depth where the net growth rate is zero is referred to as the compensation depth (only 0.1-1% of solar radiation penetrates). Above this depth the population is growing, while below it the population shrinks. At a certain depth below it, the total population losses equal the total population gains. This is the critical depth.

Critical Depth Hypothesis

Assumptions

Sverdrup’s Critical Depth Hypothesis and model is built on several strict assumptions:

Mechanism

Sverdrup’s research results suggested that the shoaling of the mixed layer depth to a depth above the critical depth was the cause of spring blooms. When the mixed layer depth exceeds the critical depth, mixing of the water brings so much of the phytoplankton population below the compensation depth where photosynthesis is impossible that the overall population cannot increase in biomass. However, when the mixed layer becomes shallower than the critical depth, enough of the phytoplankton remain above the compensation depth to give the community a positive net growth rate. Sverdrup’s model is a cause and effect relationship between the depth of the mixed layer versus the critical depth and the bloom of phytoplankton.[8]

This trigger occurs in the spring due to seasonal changes in the critical depth and mixed layer depth. The critical depth deepens in the spring because of the increased amount of solar radiation and the decrease in the angle it hits the earth. During the winter, strong winds and storms vigorously mix the water, leaving a thick mixed layer to bring up nutrient-rich waters from depth. As the average winds decrease from the winter storms and the ocean is heated, the vertical water column becomes increasingly stratified and the mixed layer depth decreases.

Sverdrup’s Critical Depth Hypothesis is limited to explaining what initiates a spring bloom. It does not predict its magnitude. Additionally, it does not address any population controls after the initial bloom, such as nutrient limitation or predator-prey interaction with zooplankton.

Regional Applicability

Since 1953, scientists have examined the applicability of Sverdrup's Critical Depth (SCD hereafter) theory in different regions around the world. Semina (1960) found that SCD hypothesis does not apply well in the Bering Sea near Kamchatka, where the bloom is more limited by stability, nutrients, and grazing than by light.[9] Obata et al.(1996) concluded that SCD theory works well at middle and high latitudes of the western North Pacific and the North Atlantic, but it is not able to explain how the spring bloom occurs in the eastern North Pacific and the Southern Ocean. Siegel et al. (2002) deduced that eastern North Atlantic Basin south of 40°N is likely limited by nutrients rather than light and hence is another region where SCD hypothesis would not be well applied. Behrenfeld (2010) also reported that SCD doesn’t apply well in Subarctic Atlantic regions.[1] It should be noted that most research used hydrographically defined mixed layer depth, which is not a good proxy for turbulence-driven movement of the phytoplankton and hence might not properly test the applicability of SCD hypothesis, as argued in Franks (2014).[7] The variable regional applicability of SCD has motivated researchers to find alternate biological and physical mechanisms for spring boom initiation in addition to the mechanism proposed by Sverdrup.

Criticisms

The main criticisms of Sverdrup's hypothesis result from its assumptions. One of the greatest limitations to understanding the cycle of spring phytoplankton blooms is the assumption that loss rates of phytoplankton in the vertical water column are constant. As more becomes known about phytoplankton loss rate components (such as grazing, respiration, and vertical export of sinking particles),[1] Sverdrup’s hypothesis has come under increasing criticism. Smetacek and Passow published a paper in 1990 that challenged the model on the basis that phytoplankton cellular respiration is not constant, but is a function of growth rate, depth, and other factors.[10] They claimed that net growth depended on irradiation, species physiology, grazing, and parasitic pressures in addition to mixed layer depth. They also point out that Sverdrup’s model included respiration of the entire community (including zooplankton) rather than solely photosynthetic organisms.

Sverdrup himself offered criticism of his model when he stated that "a phytoplankton population may increase independently of the thickness of the mixed layer if the turbulence is moderate."[3] He also said that advection rather than local growth could be responsible for the bloom he observed, and that the first increase in plankton biomass occurred before the shoaling of the mixed layer, hinting to more complex processes initiating the spring bloom.

Although Sverdrup pointed out that there is a difference between a uniform-density mixed layer and a turbulent layer, his theory is criticized for the lack of emphasis placed on how the intensity of turbulence could affect blooms. In 1999, using a numerical model, Huisman et al. formulated a "critical turbulence" hypothesis, based on the idea that spring blooms can occur even in deep mixed layers as long as turbulence stays below a critical value so that phytoplankton have enough time in the euphotic zone to absorb light.[11] This hypothesis points to the difference between a mixed layer and an actively turbulent layer that could play a more important role.

Current Considerations

Despite criticism of Sverdrup's Critical Depth Hypothesis, it is still regularly cited due to unresolved questions surrounding the initiation of spring blooms. [12] Since its introduction, Sverdrup’s hypothesis has provided a framework for future research, facilitating a wide range of studies that address its assumptions. With the advancement of interdisciplinary knowledge and technological capabilities, it has become easier to expand on Sverdrup’s basic theory for critical depth using methods that were not available at the time of its original publication.

Many studies seek to address the shortcomings of the theory by using modern observational and modeling approaches to explain how various biological and physical processes affect the initiation of spring blooms in addition to critical depth. This has led to several theories describing its initiation mechanisms that add complexity to the original theory. Theories involving the role of physiological characteristics, grazing, nutrient availability, and upper ocean physics are active areas of research on spring blooms.

Dilution Recoupling Hypothesis

Michael Behrenfeld proposes the "Dilution Recoupling Hypothesis" to describe the occurrence of annual spring blooms.[8][13] He emphasized that phytoplankton growth is balanced by losses, and the balance is controlled by seasonally varying physical processes. He argued that the occurrence of optimum growth conditions allows for both the growth of predator and prey, which results in increased interactions between the two; it recouples predator-prey interactions. He describes this relationship as being diluted (fewer interactions) in the winter, when the mixed layer is deep and stratification of the water column is minimal. Similar observations were described by Landry and Hassett (1982). The most prominent evidence supporting Behrenfeld's hypothesis is that phytoplankton blooms occur before optimal growth conditions as predicted by mixed depth shoaling, when the phytoplankton concentrations are more diluted. As stratification is established and the biomass of zooplankton increases, grazing increases and the phytoplankton biomass declines over time. Behrenfeld’s research also modeled respiration as being inversely proportional to phytoplankton growth (as growth rate decreases, respiration rate increases). Behrenfeld’s model proposes the opposite relationship of phytoplankton growth rate to mixed layer depth than Sverdrup’s: that it is maximized when the layer is deepest and phytoplankton most diluted.

Critical Turbulence Hypothesis

Another shortcoming of Sverdrup's model was that he did not consider the role of active turbulence in the mixed layer. Upper ocean turbulence can result from many sources, including thermal convection, wind, waves, and Langmuir circulation.[7] It mixes the upper layer by overturning fluid and particles, reducing the stratification in which spring blooms thrive. Huisman et al. (1999) proposed a critical turbulence mechanism in addition to critical depth that explains how spring blooms can be initiated even in the absence of surface-warming stratification. This mechanism relies on a critical turbulence level over which vertical mixing rate due to turbulence is higher than phytoplankton growth rate.[11] When the atmospheric cooling becomes weak in the spring, turbulence subsides rapidly, but the mixed layer takes a longer time to react; restratification of the mixed layer occurs on timescales of weeks to months, while reduction of turbulence takes effect almost immediately after forcing stops ((i.e. after atmospheric cooling shifts to warming). This could explain why the onset of the bloom can occur prior to the time when the mixed layer restratifies above the critical depth; reduced turbulence ceases overturning, allowing phytoplankton to have a longer residence time in the photic zone to bloom.

This theory has been explored by Taylor & Ferrari (2011) using 3D Large eddy simulation (LES) turbulence modeling to study how the shutdown of thermal convection (i.e. convective overturning resulting from cooling of the ocean surface) can halt upper ocean turbulence and initiate a bloom before the mixed layer shoals to the critical depth.[5] Unlike Huisman et al., they employed a vertically varying turbulent diffusivity in their model instead of a constant diffusivity, addressing whether the mixed layer is truly "thoroughly mixed" if temperature and density are vertically constant but turbulence intensity is not. [7] Their findings were further supported in Ferrari et al. (2015) by remote sensing of chlorophyll using ocean color measurements from the NASA MODIS Aqua satellite and air-sea heat flux measurements from ECMWF re-analysis ERA-interim data to correlate high chlorophyll concentrations to changes in surface heat flux. [14]

Enriquez & Taylor (2015) took Taylor & Ferrari’s work a step further by using an LES model to compare the influence of thermal convective mixing to wind-induced mixing for spring bloom initiation. By assigning varying values for wind stress and surface heat flux, they were able to develop parameterizations for mixing depth and turbulent diffusivity using the LES model, and apply them to a phytoplankton model to monitor the response. [15] They found that very little wind-induced turbulence is needed to prevent a bloom (consistent with Taylor & Ferrari) and that wind stress and heat flux interact such that the addition of surface heating (at the end of winter, for example) causes a sharp increase in the intensity of wind stress needed to prevent a bloom. This research has implications for the significance of different sources of turbulence in spring bloom inhibition.

Brody & Lozier (2015) also support the idea that depth of active mixing in the mixed layer controls the timing of the spring bloom. [16] Using Lagrangian floats and gliders, they were able to correlate reduced mixed layer turbulence to increased photosynthetic activity by comparing observational data of active mixing profiles to biomass depth profiles.

Onset of Stratification

Ocean surface heat flux (i.e. atmospheric cooling/heating) as well as freshwater flux (i.e. evaporation and precipitation) influence seasonal stratification by forming a density gradient that allows phytoplankton to remain in a shallow mixed layer in the photic zone, as in Sverdup’s original theory. [7] However, these processes cannot account for blooms that occur well before the onset of seasonal stratification. In many cases, the Critical Turbulence Hypothesis is also not enough to explain early bloom formations. Using float and glider data similar to Brody & Lozier (2015) as well as Argo float profiles and a 3D biophysical model constrained by observational data, Mahadevan et al. (2012) showed that spring blooms can be initiated by stratification due to horizontal density gradients (i.e. eddies and fronts), which can occur before the onset of seasonal stratification. Mahadevan termed this type of non-seasonal stratification "eddy restratification." She points out that spring blooms caused by eddy restratification can be expected to have patchier growth and more spatial heterogeneity than those due to seasonal changes, possibly allowing for a more diverse planktonic community. [17]

Physiological considerations

In addition to abiotic factors, recent studies have also examined the role of individual phytoplankton traits that may lead to the initiation of the spring bloom. Models have suggested that these variable, cell-specific parameters, previously fixed by Sverdrup, could play an important role in predicting the onset of a bloom.[18] Some of these factors might include:

Given the high spatial and temporal variability of their physical environment, certain phytoplankton species might possess an optimal fitness profile for a given pre-bloom environment over competitors. This physiological profile might also influence its pre-bloom growth rate. For this reason, Lewandowska et al. propose that each phytoplankton has a specific critical depth. If none of the constituent pre-bloom species meet the environmental requirements, no bloom will occur.[19][20]

Direct evidence for the role of physiological factors in bloom initiation has been difficult to acquire. Using decades of satellite data, Behrenfeld and Boss argued that physiological adaptations to the environment were not significantly linked to bloom initiation (measured via cell division rate).[21] However, recent results from Hunter-Cevera et al. using an automated submersible flow cytometer over 13 years show a positive correlation between temperature and cell division rate in Synechococcus. Warmer waters led to higher cell division rates and “shifts in the timing of spring blooms reflect a direct physiological response to shifts in the onset of seasonal warming.”[22]

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 Behrenfeld, Michael, J. (2010). "Abandoning Sverdrup's Critical Depth Hypothesis on Phytoplankton blooms". Ecology. 91 (4): 997–989. doi:10.1890/09-1207.1.
  2. Gran, H. H.; Braarud, Trygve (1935). Journal of the Biological Board of Canada. 1 (5): 279–467. doi:10.1139/f35-012. Missing or empty |title= (help)
  3. 1 2 3 Sverdrup, H. U. (1953). "On Conditions for the Vernal Blooming of Phytoplankton". Journal du Conseil International pour l'Exploration de la Mer. 18: 287–295. doi:10.1093/icesjms/18.3.287.
  4. Chiswell, S. M. (2011). "The spring phytoplankton bloom: don't abandon Sverdrup completely". Marine Ecology Progress Series. 443: 39–50. doi:10.3354/meps09453.
  5. 1 2 Taylor, J. R.; Ferrari, R. (2011). "Shutdown of turbulent convection as a new criterion for the onset of spring phytoplankton blooms". Limnology and Oceanography. 56 (6): 2293–2307. doi:10.4319/lo.2011.56.6.2293.
  6. Mann, K.H.; Lazier, J.R.N. (2006). Dynamics of Marine Ecosystems, Biological-Physical Interactions in the Oceans. Blackwell Scientific Publications.
  7. 1 2 3 4 5 Franks, Peter J.S. "Has Sverdrup's critical depth hypothesis been tested? Mixed layers vs. turbulent layers". ICES Journal of Marine Science. doi:10.1093/icesjms/fsu175.
  8. 1 2 Miller, Charles B. (2004). Biological Oceanography. Malden, MA: Black Well Publishing.
  9. Fischer, A.D.; Moberg, E.A.; Alexander, H.; Brownlee, E.F.; Hunter-Cevera, K.R.; Pitz, K.J.; Rosengard, S.Z.; Sosik, H.M. "Sixty years of Sverdrup: A retrospective of progress in the study of phytoplankton blooms". Oceanography. 27 (1): 222-235. doi:10.5670/oceanog.2014.26.
  10. Smetacek, Victor; Passow, Uta (1990). "Spring bloom initiation and Sverdrup's critical depth model". Limnology and Oceanography. 35: 228–234. doi:10.2307/2837359.
  11. 1 2 Huisman, J.; van Oostveen, P.; Weissing, F.J. (1999). "Critical depth and critical turbulence: Two different mechanisms for the development of phytoplankton blooms". Limnology and Oceanography. 44: 1781–1787. doi:10.4319/lo.1999.44.7.1781.
  12. Sathyendranath, S.; R. Ji; H.I. Browman (2015). "Revisiting Sverdrup's critical depth hypothesis.". ICES Journal of Marine Science. 72: 1892–1896. doi:10.1093/icesjms/fsv110.
  13. Boss, E.; Behrenfeld, M. (2010). "In Situ evaluation of initiation of the North Atlantic Phytoplankton Bloom". Geophysical Research Letters. 37: L18603. Bibcode:2010GeoRL..3718603B. doi:10.1029/2010GL044174.
  14. Ferrari, R.; Merrifield, S.T.; Taylor, J. R. (2015). "Shutdown of convection triggers increase of surface chlorophyll". Journal of Marine Systems. 147: 116–122. doi:10.1016/j.jmarsys.2014.02.009.
  15. Enriquez, R.M.; Taylor, J.R. (2015). "Numerical simulations of the competition between wind-driven mixing and surface heating in triggering spring phytoplankton blooms". ICES Journal of Marine Science. 72: 1926–1941. doi:10.1093/icesjms/fsv071.
  16. Brody, S.R.; Lozier, M.S. (2015). "Characterizing upper-ocean mixing and its effect on the spring phytoplankton bloom with in situ data". ICES Journal of Marine Science. 72: 1961–1970. doi:10.1093/icesjms/fsv006.
  17. Mahadevan, A.; D'Asaro, E.; Lee, C.; Perry, M.J. (2012). "Eddy-Driven Stratification Initiates North Atlantic Spring Phytoplankton Blooms". Science. 337 (6090): 54–58. doi:10.1126/science.1218740.
  18. "Physiological constrains on Sverdrup's Critical-Depth-Hypothesis: the influences of dark respiration and sinking.". ICES Journal of Marine Science: Journal du Conseil. 72.6 (2015): 1942-1951.
  19. "The importance of phytoplankton trait variability in spring bloom formation.". ICES Journal of Marine Science: Journal du Conseil. (2015): fsv059.
  20. "Role of Viral Infection in Controlling Planktonic Blooms-Conclusion Drawn from a Mathematical Model of Phytoplankton-Zooplankton System.". Differential Equations and Dynamical Systems. (2016): 1-20.
  21. "Resurrecting the ecological underpinnings of ocean plankton blooms.". Annual Review of Marine Science. 6 (2014): 167-194.
  22. "Physiological and ecological drivers of early spring blooms of a coastal phytoplankter.". Science. 354.6310 (2016): 326-329.
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