Kate E. Lowry
Stanford University
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Featured researches published by Kate E. Lowry.
Science | 2012
Kevin R. Arrigo; Donald K. Perovich; Robert S. Pickart; Zachary W. Brown; Gert L. van Dijken; Kate E. Lowry; Matthew M. Mills; Molly A. Palmer; William M. Balch; Frank Bahr; Nicholas R. Bates; Claudia R. Benitez-Nelson; Bruce C. Bowler; Emily F. Brownlee; Jens K. Ehn; Karen E. Frey; Rebecca Garley; Samuel R. Laney; Laura C. Lubelczyk; Jeremy T. Mathis; A. Matsuoka; B. Greg Mitchell; G. W. K. Moore; E. Ortega-Retuerta; Sharmila Pal; Chris Polashenski; Rick A. Reynolds; Brian Schieber; Heidi M. Sosik; Michael Stephens
In midsummer, diatoms have taken advantage of thinning ice cover to feed in nutrient-rich waters. Phytoplankton blooms over Arctic Ocean continental shelves are thought to be restricted to waters free of sea ice. Here, we document a massive phytoplankton bloom beneath fully consolidated pack ice far from the ice edge in the Chukchi Sea, where light transmission has increased in recent decades because of thinning ice cover and proliferation of melt ponds. The bloom was characterized by high diatom biomass and rates of growth and primary production. Evidence suggests that under-ice phytoplankton blooms may be more widespread over nutrient-rich Arctic continental shelves and that satellite-based estimates of annual primary production in these waters may be underestimated by up to 10-fold.
Journal of Geophysical Research | 2017
Kevin R. Arrigo; Matthew M. Mills; Gert L. van Dijken; Kate E. Lowry; Robert S. Pickart; Reiner Schlitzer
Measurements of late springtime nutrient concentrations in Arctic waters are relatively rare due to the extensive sea ice cover that makes sampling difficult. During the SUBICE cruise in May-June 2014, an extensive survey of hydrography and pre-bloom concentrations of inorganic macronutrients, oxygen, particulate organic carbon and nitrogen, and chlorophyll a was conducted in the northeastern Chukchi Sea. Cold (< -1.5°C) winter water was prevalent throughout the study area, and the water column was weakly stratified. Nitrate (NO3-) concentration averaged 12.6±1.92 μM in surface waters and 14.0±1.91 μM near the bottom and was significantly correlated with salinity. The highest NO3- concentrations were associated with winter water within the Central Channel flow path. NO3- concentrations were much reduced near the northern shelfbreak within the upper halocline waters of the Canada Basin and along the eastern side of the shelf near the Alaskan coast. Net community production (NCP), estimated as the difference in depth-integrated NO3- content between spring (this study) and summer (historical), varied from 28-38 g C m-2 a-1. This is much lower than previous NCP estimates that used NO3- concentrations from the southeastern Bering Sea as a baseline. These results demonstrate the importance of using profiles of NO3- measured as close to the beginning of the spring bloom as possible when estimating local NCP. They also show that once the snow melts in spring, increased light transmission through the sea ice to the waters below the ice could fuel large phytoplankton blooms over a much wider area than previously known.
Journal of Geophysical Research | 2017
Kevin R. Arrigo; Gert L. van Dijken; Anne-Carlijn Alderkamp; Zachary K. Erickson; Kate M. Lewis; Kate E. Lowry; Hannah L. Joy-Warren; Rob Middag; Janice E. Nash-Arrigo; Virginia Selz; Willem H. van de Poll
The Palmer Long-Term Ecological Research program has sampled waters of the western Antarctic Peninsula (wAP) annually each summer since 1990. However, information about the wAP prior to the peak of the phytoplankton bloom in January is sparse. Here we present results from a spring process cruise that sampled the wAP in the early stages of phytoplankton bloom development in 2014. Sea ice concentrations were high on the shelf relative to nonshelf waters, especially toward the south. Macronutrients were high and nonlimiting to phytoplankton growth in both shelf and nonshelf waters, while dissolved iron concentrations were high only on the shelf. Phytoplankton were in good physiological condition throughout the wAP, although biomass on the shelf was uniformly low, presumably because of heavy sea ice cover. In contrast, an early stage phytoplankton bloom was observed beneath variable sea ice cover just seaward of the shelf break. Chlorophyll a concentrations in the bloom reached 2 mg m^(−3) within a 100–150 km band between the SBACC and SACCF. The location of the bloom appeared to be controlled by a balance between enhanced vertical mixing at the position of the two fronts and increased stratification due to melting sea ice between them. Unlike summer, when diatoms overwhelmingly dominate the phytoplankton population of the wAP, the haptophyte Phaeocystis antarctica dominated in spring, although diatoms were common. These results suggest that factors controlling phytoplankton abundance and composition change seasonally and may differentially affect phytoplankton populations as environmental conditions within the wAP region continue to change.
Journal of Geophysical Research | 2018
Kate E. Lowry; Robert S. Pickart; Virginia Selz; Matthew M. Mills; Astrid Pacini; Kate M. Lewis; Hannah L. Joy-Warren; Carolina Nobre; Gert L. van Dijken; Pierre‐Luc Grondin; Joannie Ferland; Kevin R. Arrigo
Spring phytoplankton growth in polar marine ecosystems is limited by light availability beneath ice-covered waters, particularly early in the season prior to snowmelt and melt pond formation. Leads of open water increase light transmission to the ice-covered ocean and are sites of air-sea exchange. We explore the role of leads in controlling phytoplankton bloom dynamics within the sea ice zone of the Arctic Ocean. Data are presented from spring measurements in the Chukchi Sea during the Study of Under-ice Blooms In the Chukchi Ecosystem (SUBICE) program in May and June 2014. We observed that fully consolidated sea ice supported modest under-ice blooms, while waters beneath sea ice with leads had significantly lower phytoplankton biomass, despite high nutrient availability. Through an analysis of hydrographic and biological properties, we attribute this counterintuitive finding to springtime convective mixing in refreezing leads of open water. Our results demonstrate that waters beneath loosely consolidated sea ice (84–95% ice concentration) had weak stratification and were frequently mixed below the critical depth (the depth at which depth-integrated production balances depth-integrated respiration). These findings are supported by theoretical model calculations of under-ice light, primary production, and critical depth at varied lead fractions. The model demonstrates that under-ice blooms can form even beneath snow-covered sea ice in the absence of mixing but not in more deeply mixed waters beneath sea ice with refreezing leads. Future estimates of primary production should account for these phytoplankton dynamics in ice-covered waters.
Frontiers in Marine Science | 2018
Matthew M. Mills; Zachary W. Brown; Sam L. Laney; E. Ortega-Retuerta; Kate E. Lowry; Gert L. van Dijken; Kevin R. Arrigo
Major changes to Arctic marine ecosystems have resulted in longer growing seasons with increased phytoplankton production over larger areas. In the Chukchi Sea, the high productivity fuels intense benthic denitrification creating a nitrogen (N) deficit that is transported through the Arctic to the Atlantic Ocean, where it likely fuels nitrogen fixation. Given the rapid pace of environmental change and the potentially globally significant N deficit, we conducted experiments aimed at understanding phytoplankton and microbial N utilization in the Chukchi Sea. Ship-board experiments tested the effect of NO3- additions on both phytoplankton and heterotrophic prokaryote abundance, community composition, photophysiology, carbon fixation and NO3- uptake rates. Results support the critical role of NO3- in limiting summer phytoplankton communities to small cells with low production rates. NO3- additions increased particulate concentrations, abundance of large diatoms, and rates of carbon fixation and NO3- uptake by cells >1 µm. Increases in the quantum yield and electron turnover rate of photosystem II in NO3- treatments suggested that phytoplankton in the ambient dissolved N environment were N starved and unable to build new, or repair damaged, reaction centers. While some increases in heterotrophic prokaryote abundance and production were noted with NO3- amendments, phytoplankton competition or grazers likely dampened these responses. Trends toward a warmer more stratified Chukchi Sea will likely enhance summer oligotrophic conditions and further N starve Chukchi Sea phytoplankton communities.
Deep-sea Research Part Ii-topical Studies in Oceanography | 2014
Kevin R. Arrigo; Donald K. Perovich; Robert S. Pickart; Zachary W. Brown; Gert L. van Dijken; Kate E. Lowry; Matthew M. Mills; Molly A. Palmer; William M. Balch; Nicholas R. Bates; Claudia R. Benitez-Nelson; Emily F. Brownlee; Karen E. Frey; Samuel R. Laney; Jeremy T. Mathis; A. Matsuoka; B. Greg Mitchell; G. W. K. Moore; Rick A. Reynolds; Heidi M. Sosik; James H. Swift
Deep-sea Research Part Ii-topical Studies in Oceanography | 2012
Kevin R. Arrigo; Kate E. Lowry; Gert L. van Dijken
Oceanography | 2012
Patricia L. Yager; Robert M. Sherrell; Anne-Carlijn Alderkamp; Oscar Schofield; E. Povl Abrahamsen; Kevin R. Arrigo; Stefan Bertilsson; D. Lollie Garay; Raul Guerrero; Kate E. Lowry; Per-Olav Moksnes; Kuria Ndungu; Anton F. Post; Evan Randall-Goodwin; Lasse Riemann; Silke Severmann; Sven Thatje; Gert L. van Dijken; Stephanie E. Wilson
Deep-sea Research Part Ii-topical Studies in Oceanography | 2015
Kate E. Lowry; Robert S. Pickart; Matthew M. Mills; Zachary W. Brown; Gert L. van Dijken; Nicholas R. Bates; Kevin R. Arrigo
Deep-sea Research Part Ii-topical Studies in Oceanography | 2015
Zachary W. Brown; Kate E. Lowry; Molly A. Palmer; Gert L. van Dijken; Matthew M. Mills; Robert S. Pickart; Kevin R. Arrigo