As at August 2008 the Tsuda 2007 paper is the only one to carry a general description.
The first iron addition was carried out from 0:50 GMT on 20 July to 0:00 GMT on 21 July (GMT). Day 1 was defined as 21 July (GMT).
Tsuda, A., et al. (2007): Evidence for the grazing hypothesis: Grazing reduces phytoplankton responses of the HNLC ecosystem to iron enrichment in the western subarctic pacific (SEEDS II). J. Oceanogr. 63(6), 983-994.
A mesoscale iron-enrichment study (SEEDS II) was carried out in the western subarctic Pacific in the summer of 2004. The iron patch was traced for 26 days, which included observations of the development and the decline of the bloom by mapping with sulfur hexafluoride. The experiment was conducted at almost the same location and the same season as SEEDS (previous iron- enrichment experiment). However, the results were very different between SEEDS and SEEDS II. A high accumulation of phytoplankton biomass (~18 mg chl m-3) was characteristic of SEEDS. In contrast, in SEEDS II, the surface chlorophyll-a accumulation was lower, 0.8 to 2.48 mg m-3, with no prominent diatom bloom. Photosynthetic competence in terms of Fv/Fm for the total phytoplankton community in the surface waters increased after the iron enrichments and returned to the ambient level by day 20. These results suggest that the photosynthetic physiology of the phytoplankton assemblage was improved by the iron enrichments and returned to an iron-stressed condition during the declining phase of the bloom. Pico-phytoplankton (<2 um) became dominant in the chlorophyll-a size distribution after the bloom.
We observed a nitrate drawdown of 3.8 uM in the patch (day 21), but there was no difference in silicic acid concentration between inside and outside the patch. Mesozooplankton (copepod) biomass was three to five times higher during the bloom-development phase in SEEDS II than in SEEDS. The copepod biomass increased exponentially. The grazing rate estimation indicates that the copepod grazing prevented the formation of an extensive diatom bloom, which was observed in SEEDS, and led to the change to a pico- phytoplankton dominated community towards the end of the experiment.
SEEDS II was conduced in the same western subarctic Pacific region as the initial SEEDS experiment, and was an international collaborative study utilizing two research vessels (R.V. Hakuho Maru and R.V. Kilo Moana). This experiment was designed to characterize the evolution of the fertilized patch over a longer time scale (1 month) and with a greater range of parameters than measured during SEEDS.
The preliminary results from SEEDS II showed both the iron-induced increase and subsequent decline in phytoplankton biomass. However, the iron-initiated bloom was much less intense than observed in SEEDS. Chlorophyll-a concentrations increased only 2 to 3 times over initial values, and the drawdown of nutrients and pCO2 were small.
SEEDS II Project Documentation
SEEDS II Workshop Summary
Dataset | Latest Version Date | Current State |
---|---|---|
Data Inventory from R/V Hakuho-maru and R/V Kilo Moana cruises KH04xx-01, KH04xx-02 and KM0415 in the Northwestern Sub-Arctic Pacific in 2004 (SEEDS II project) | 2009-08-03 | Final no updates expected |
CTD sampling logs from R/V Hakuho-maru and R/V Kilo Moana cruises KH04xx-01, KH04xx-02,and KM0415 in the Northwestern Sub-Arctic Pacific in 2004 (SEEDS II project) | 2009-07-15 | Final no updates expected |
Lead Principal Investigator: Atsushi Tsuda
Ocean Research Institute - University of Tokyo (ORI)
Co-Principal Investigator: Shigenobu Takeda
University of Tokyo
Co-Principal Investigator: Mark L. Wells
University of Maine
Contact: Evelyn Armstrong
University of Otago
Contact: Doug Mackie
University of Otago
BCO-DMO Data Manager: Stephen R. Gegg
Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution (WHOI BCO-DMO)
Iron Synthesis [FeSynth]