Environmental changes such as seasonality, decadal oscillation, and anthropogenic forcing may shape the dynamics of lower trophic-level organisms. In this study, 9-years (2010-2018) of monitoring data on microscopic protists such… Click to show full abstract
Environmental changes such as seasonality, decadal oscillation, and anthropogenic forcing may shape the dynamics of lower trophic-level organisms. In this study, 9-years (2010-2018) of monitoring data on microscopic protists such as diatoms and dinoflagellates, and environmental variables were analyzed to clarify the relationships between plankton and local/synoptic environmental changes. We found that time-series temperature increased in May, whereas it decreased in August and November. Nutrients (e.g., phosphate) decreased in May, remained unchanged in August, and increased in November from 2010 to 2018. The partial pressure of CO2 increased in May, August, and November over time. It is notable that the change in seawater temperature (-0.54 to 0.32 °C per year) and CO2 levels (3.6-5.7 μatm CO2 per year) in the latest decade in the eastern Tsugaru Strait were highly dynamic than the projected anthropogenic climate change. Protist abundance generally increased or stayed unchanged during the examined period. In August and November, when cooling and decreases in pH occurred, diatoms such as Chaetoceros subgenus Hyalochaete spp. and Rhizosoleniaceae temporally increased from 2010 to 2018. During the study period, we found that locally aquacultured scallops elevated soft tissue mass relative to the total weight as diatom abundance increased, and the relative scallop soft tissue mass was positively related to the Pacific Decadal Oscillation index. These results indicate that decadal climatic forcing in the ocean modifies the local physical and chemical environment, which strongly affects phytoplankton dynamics rather than the effect of anthropogenic climate change in the eastern Tsugaru Strait.
               
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