Comparison of productivity and phytoplankton in a warm (Kongsfjorden) and a cold (Hornsund) Spitsbergen fjord in mid-summer 2002.

2009 
Kongsfjorden and Hornsund are two glacial fjords without sills on the West Spitsbergen coast. Both sites are under the influence of relatively warm Atlantic-derived water, although Hornsund is more influenced by cold water from the Barents Sea. In this study, we compared the impacts of cold Arctic and warmer Atlantic waters on the pelagic ecosystems of Kongsfjorden and Hornsund. Both fjords were strongly influenced by Atlantic-derived waters during summer (2002). Diatoms were the most substantial contributors to phytoplankton biomass, especially in outer basins of both fjords, whereas the second most important contributors were autotrophic dinoflagellates in Kongsfjorden and nanoflagellates in Hornsund. Total phytoplankton biomass was highest in Hornsund. Primary production rates were an order of magnitude lower in Kongsfjorden than in Hornsund, and increased from inner to outer fjord (from 2.47 to 4.48 mg C m−2 h−1 in Kongsfjorden and from 14.00 to 86.65 mg C m−2 h−1 in Hornsund). Chlorophyll-a concentration was also substantially lower in Kongsfjorden. Zooplankton was dominated by omnivorous species in Kongsfjorden and herbivorous in Hornsund. Observed differences between the fjords may originate from (1) advection of different waters into the fjords; (2) differences in freshwater runoff and turbidity, and (3) timing of the phytoplankton bloom. Climate warming will likely increase the Atlantic water influence, and result in reduced production of diatoms and increase in flagellates.
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