loading page

Quantfication of the pelagic primary production beneath Arctic sea ice
  • +4
  • Jaclyn Clement Kinney,
  • Wieslaw Maslowski,
  • Robert Osinski,
  • Meibing Jin,
  • Marina Frants,
  • Nicole Jeffery,
  • Younjoo Lee
Jaclyn Clement Kinney
Naval Postgraduate School

Corresponding Author:jlclemen@nps.edu

Author Profile
Wieslaw Maslowski
Naval Postgraduate School
Author Profile
Robert Osinski
Institute of Oceanology of Polish Academy of Sciences
Author Profile
Meibing Jin
University of Alaska
Author Profile
Marina Frants
Naval Postgraduate School
Author Profile
Nicole Jeffery
Los Alamos National Laboratory
Author Profile
Younjoo Lee
Naval Postgraduate School
Author Profile

Abstract

In high-latitude environments such as the Arctic Ocean, phytoplankton growth is strongly constrained by light availability. Because light penetration into the upper ocean is attenuated by snow and ice cover, it was generally believed until recently that phytoplankton growth was limited to areas of open water, with negligible growth under the ice. However, under-ice phytoplankton blooms have been reported multiple times over the past several decades [e.g. Fukuchi et al. (1989); Legendre, Ingram, and Poulin (1989)]. In July 2011, Arrigo et al. (2012) observed a massive phytoplankton bloom beneath sea ice in the Chukchi Sea. Observational evidence suggests that this bloom was not an isolated case, and that under-ice blooms maybe widespread on Arctic continental shelves (Arrigo et al., 2014; Lowry, van Dijken, & Arrigo, 2014). Arrigo and van Dijken (2011) estimate the total primary production north of the Arctic Circle to be 438 +/- 21.5 Tg C yr -1. However, due to observational limitations, this estimate did not include under sea ice production. Therefore, an open question remains: How important are under-ice phytoplankton blooms to the total Arctic primary production? RASM is a high-resolution, fully-coupled, regional model with a domain encompassing the entire marine cryosphere of the Northern Hemisphere, including the major inflow and outflow pathways, with extensions into North Pacific and Atlantic oceans. The components of RASM include: atmosphere, sea ice, ocean, biogeochemical, and land hydrology (Maslowski et al. 2012, Roberts et al. 2015, DuVivier et al. 2016, Hamman et al. 2016, Hamman et al. 2017, Cassano et al. 2017). The ocean BGC component in RASM is a medium-complexity Nutrients-Phytoplankton-Zoo-plankton-Detritus (NPZD) model (Jin et al. 2018). The model has three phytoplankton categories: diatoms, small phytoplankton and diazotrophs. RASM results show that under-ice pelagic chl-a and primary production values can at times be very high, particularly during the spring and early summer. Our numerical model results produce a mean of 495 Tg C yr -1 north of the Arctic Circle during 1980-1998 (and 507 Tg C yr -1 during 1980-2018). We also see an increase in primary production over the last several decades. This increase is attributed to the reduced sea ice cover, which increases light availability to the upper ocean. We conclude that under-sea-ice pelagic primary production makes up a large fraction of the total production and cannot be considered negligible.