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ARTÍCULO
TITULO

Phytoplankton Dynamics and Biogeochemistry of the Black Sea

Vladimir Silkin    
Larisa Pautova    
Oleg Podymov    
Valeryi Chasovnikov    
Anna Lifanchuk    
Alexey Fedorov and Agnislava Kluchantseva    

Resumen

The biogeochemistry of waters is an essential regulator of phytoplankton dynamics, determining the level of species bloom and the change in dominants. This paper investigated the seasonal dynamics of phytoplankton and the nutrient concentrations and their ratios in the northeastern Black Sea in 2017?2021. Two taxonomic groups, diatoms and coccolithophores, determine the seasonal dynamics and significantly contribute to the total phytoplankton biomass. Coccolithophores formed blooms in early June annually, except in 2020. Large diatoms dominated in summer with a biomass exceeding 1000 mg m-3 annually, except in 2019. During the blooms of these taxonomic groups, their contribution to the total phytoplankton biomass exceeded 90%. Each group has characteristic biogeochemical niches in the nitrogen and phosphorus concentration coordinates. The position of the seasonal thermocline regulates the biogeochemistry of the water. With a high-lying and sharp gradient thermocline (the average for five years is 6.87 m), low nitrogen concentrations and a nitrogen-to-phosphorus ratio below the Redfield ratio are created in the upper mixed layer. These conditions are optimal for the dominance of coccolithophores. When the thermocline is deepened (the average for five years is 17.96 m), the phosphorus concentration decreases significantly and the ratio of nitrogen to phosphorus is significantly higher than the Redfield ratio, and these conditions lead to the dominance of large diatoms. The results of experimental studies with nitrogen and phosphorus additives in the natural phytoplankton population confirm the above statements. The addition of phosphorus leads to the increased role of coccolithophores in the total phytoplankton biomass, the addition of nitrogen alone contributes to the growth of large diatoms, and the combined addition of phosphorus and nitrogen in a ratio close to the Redfield ratio leads to the dominance of small diatoms.