Photoacclimation and Photoadaptation Sensitivity in a Global Ocean
Ecosystem Model
- Charles A. A Stock,
- John P. Patrick Dunne,
- Jessica Y. Luo,
- Andrew Ross,
- Nicolas van Oostende,
- Niki Zadeh
John P. Patrick Dunne
Geophysical Fluid Dynamics Laboratory
Author ProfileJessica Y. Luo
NOAA Geophysical Fluid Dynamics Laboratory
Author ProfileNicolas van Oostende
Princeton University Department of Geosciences
Author ProfileAbstract
Chlorophyll underpins ocean productivity yet simulating chlorophyll
across biomes, seasons and depths remains challenging for earth system
models. Inconsistencies are often attributed to misrepresentation of the
myriad growth and loss processes governing phytoplankton biomass but may
also arise from unresolved or misspecified photoacclimation or
photoadaptation responses. A series of global ocean ecosystem
simulations were enlisted to assess the impacts of alternative
photoacclimation and photoadaptation assumptions on simulated
chlorophyll, primary productivity and carbon export. Photoacclimation
alternatives implicitly modulated the premium placed on light harvesting
versus photodamage avoidance and other cellular functions, while
photoadaptation experiments probed the impact of adding low- and
high-light adapted phytoplankton ecotypes. Alternatives generated large
chlorophyll responses that addressed prior model biases in ways that
simple changes in growth and grazing could not. Simulations with
photoadaptation, surface-skewed photoacclimation in deep mixed layers,
and acclimation to light levels over mixing depths consistent with
photoacclimation time scales in stratified waters were best able to
match observed patterns. While chlorophyll was highly sensitive to
alternative photoacclimation assumptions, primary production and carbon
export were not because chlorophyll changes under near-saturating light
at the ocean's surface yielded only modest phytoplankton growth changes
that were counteracted by self-shading at depth. Improved
photoacclimation and photoadaption constraints and reduced regional
uncertainties in satellite-based ocean color estimates are needed to
reduce ambiguities in the drivers of chlorophyll change and their
biogeochemical implications.10 Sep 2024Submitted to ESS Open Archive 17 Sep 2024Published in ESS Open Archive