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A Recirculating Eddy Promotes Subsurface Particle Retention In An Antarctic Biological Hotspot, Katherine L. Hudson, Matthew John Oliver, Josh Kohut, Michael S. Dinniman, J. M. Klinck, Carlos Moffat, Hank Statscewich, Kim S. Bernard, William Fraser
A Recirculating Eddy Promotes Subsurface Particle Retention In An Antarctic Biological Hotspot, Katherine L. Hudson, Matthew John Oliver, Josh Kohut, Michael S. Dinniman, J. M. Klinck, Carlos Moffat, Hank Statscewich, Kim S. Bernard, William Fraser
OES Faculty Publications
Palmer Deep Canyon is one of the biological hotspots associated with deep bathymetric features along the Western Antarctic Peninsula. The upwelling of nutrient-rich Upper Circumpolar Deep Water to the surface mixed layer in the submarine canyon has been hypothesized to drive increased phytoplankton biomass productivity, attracting krill, penguins and other top predators to the region. However, observations in Palmer Deep Canyon lack a clear in-situ upwelling signal, lack a physiological response by phytoplankton to Upper Circumpolar Deep Water in laboratory experiments, and surface residence times that are too short for phytoplankton populations to reasonably respond to any locally upwelled nutrients. …