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Detection of coccolithophore blooms With BioGeoChemical‐Argo floats
Terrats, L.; Claustre, H.; Cornec, M.; Mangin, A.; Neukermans, G. (2020). Detection of coccolithophore blooms With BioGeoChemical‐Argo floats. Geophys. Res. Lett. 47(23): e2020GL090559. https://dx.doi.org/10.1029/2020gl090559
In: Geophysical Research Letters. American Geophysical Union: Washington. ISSN 0094-8276; e-ISSN 1944-8007, more
Peer reviewed article  

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Keyword
    Marine/Coastal
Author keywords
    coccolithophores; Emiliania huxleyi; bloom detection; BGC-Argo floats;bio-optics; global ocean

Authors  Top 
  • Terrats, L.
  • Claustre, H.
  • Cornec, M.
  • Mangin, A.
  • Neukermans, G., more

Abstract
    Coccolithophores (calcifying phytoplankton) form extensive blooms in temperate and subpolar oceans as evidenced from ocean‐color satellites. This study examines the potential to detect coccolithophore blooms with BioGeoChemical‐Argo (BGC‐Argo) floats, autonomous ocean profilers equipped with bio‐optical and physicochemical sensors. We first matched float data to ocean‐color satellite data of calcite concentration to select floats that sampled coccolithophore blooms. We identified two floats in the Southern Ocean, which measured the particulate beam attenuation coefficient (cp) in addition to two core BGC‐Argo variables, Chlorophyll‐a concentration ([Chl‐a]) and the particle backscattering coefficient (bbp). We show that coccolithophore blooms can be identified from floats by distinctively high values of (1) the bbp/cp ratio, a proxy for the refractive index of suspended particles, and (2) the bbp/[Chl‐a] ratio, measurable by any BGC‐Argo float. The latter thus paves the way to global investigations of environmental control of coccolithophore blooms and their role in carbon export.

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