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Potential Impact of Photoinhibition on Microphytobenthic Primary Production on a Large Intertidal Mudflat
Author(s) -
Savelli Raphaël,
Serôdio João,
Cugier Philippe,
Méléder Vona,
Polsenaere Pierre,
Dupuy Christine,
Le Fouest Vincent
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
journal of geophysical research: biogeosciences
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2169-8961
pISSN - 2169-8953
DOI - 10.1029/2021jg006443
Subject(s) - photoinhibition , intertidal zone , rocky shore , photosynthetically active radiation , temperate climate , environmental science , shore , ecology , biology , oceanography , photosynthesis , botany , geology , photosystem ii
Microphytobenthos (MPB) are a key primary producer of intertidal mudflats. MPB face strong variability in incident irradiance during low tides. Despite photoprotection and photoacclimation, such variations can translate into the photoinhibition of MPB cells. This study explores the effect of photoinhibition on MPB primary production (PP) over a large and productive temperate mudflat (Brouage mudflat, NW France). We used a regional and high‐resolution tri‐dimensional hydrodynamic model coupled to an MPB model with or without photoinhibition. Photoinhibition leads to a 20% (−0.79 × 10 3 t C) decrease of the simulated MPB PP over the entire mudflat. As the upper shore is exposed to light more frequently and longer than the lower shore, the decrease of MPB PP is higher on the upper shore (−29%) than on the lower shore (−5%). With the highest photosynthetically active radiation cumulated over the mudflat, the decrease of MPB PP due to photoinhibition is the highest during spring and spring tides (−22% and −23%, respectively). The model suggests MPB photoinhibition is sensitive to the photoacclimation status of MPB cells through the light saturation parameter. This first modeling attempt to account for MPB photoinhibition is highly constrained by our current theoretical knowledge and limitations on the MPB growth physiology, but it suggests that this process can have a substantial impact on the MPB PP. As such, assessing the MPB photosynthetic response to the highly variable environmental conditions that prevail in large and productive intertidal mudflats is a real challenge for quantifying MPB PP from a synoptic to inter‐annual time scale.

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