Publication | Closed Access
Seasonal variability in biological carbon biomass standing stocks and production in the surface layers of the Bay of Bengal
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Citations
34
References
2010
Year
Surface LayersEngineeringMarine ChemistryMarine SystemsOceanographyBiogeochemical ModelPrimary ProductionEarth ScienceMarine EnvironmentBiological Carbon BiomassOrganic GeochemistrySeasonal VariabilityMicrobial EcologyBiological OceanographyEnvironmental MicrobiologyCarbon CycleBlue CarbonClimate ChangeCarbon SequestrationBiogeochemistryWestern BayMedicineMesozooplankton BiomassBiogeochemical CycleMarine BiotaPhytoplankton EcologyMicrobiologyMarine BiologyCentral Bay
and NEM averaged 688, 767, 1212 and 1057 mg C m -2 in the western Bay (WB) and 518, 904, 789 and1023 mg C m -2 in the central Bay (CB). Primary productivity (PP) averaged 326, 281, 366 and 280 mg C m -2 d -1 in the WB and 144, 306, 241 and 375 mg C m -2 d -1 in the CB respectively. Shallow euphotic depths (~<55m) apparently are not conducive for (PP) in the 0-120 m column. Heterotrophic bacterial carbon biomass was sizable and averaged 282, 662, 95 and 288 mg C m -2 in the WB and was 677, 227, 104 and 333 mg C m -2 in the CB during SuM, FIM, SpIM and NEM respectively. They appear very crucial in governing the abundances of microheterotrophs in the southern and, open-ocean regions of the Bay. Microzooplankton were much poorer in abundance than those in the Arabian Sea except during SpIM. Their maximum carbon biomass (WB: 233; CB: 327 mg C m -2 in the top 120 m was observed during SpIM. In the upper 200 m, the mesozooplankton biomass did not show much variation between the season (WB: 222, 906, 2428 and 988 mg C m -2 and CB: 587, 1036, 821 and 808 mg C m -2 d -1 respectively during SuM, FIM, SpIM and NEM). Incidentally it was mostly decoupled with chl a and PP. Cold-core eddies observed during most sampled seasons seem to bear an enhancing influence on the overall biological productivity processes.
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