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Phytoplankton light absorption and the package effect in California coastal waters
88
Citations
25
References
1993
Year
BiogeochemistryEnvironmental MonitoringEngineeringLimnologyZooplankton EcologyPhytoplankton Light AbsorptionCalifornia Coastal WatersSpectral ReconstructionsMarine ChemistryWater QualityOceanographyCoastal WaterPhytoplankton Absorption SpectraPhotosynthesisPhytoplankton EcologyMarine EnvironmentPackage Effect
Phytoplankton absorption spectra were determined for communities collected in the upper euphotic zone over a 250 km transect across a highly variable region of the Southern California Bight.The influence of the 'package effect' on phytoplankton absorption spectra was assessed by comparison of absorption coefficient spectra based on direct measurement with spectral reconstructions calculated from HPLC-determined pigment concentrations.Measurable package effect occurred in less than 25 % of samples, principally from samples taken in the subsurface chlorophyll a maxin~um layer and in association with populat~ons of large diatonls or dense pryn~nesiophyte concentrations.Estimates of the package effect in the field derived from these measurements were consistent wlth the majority of laboratory-determined data for chromophyte and chlorophyte algae.In the cases where reconstructed phytoplankton absorptlon spectra overestimated measured spectra, the majority of differ- ences could be reconclled by the application of a n algorithm calculating the package effect.Where package effects were minlmal, reconstructed absorption spectra provided accurate estimates of phytoplankton photosynthetic light absorptlon without correction for package effects.Existing models for phytoplankton absorption properties will benefit from inclusion of information on the package effect, determined from dlrect absorption measure~nents or from information on the taxonomic composltlon of the phytoplankton community.
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