Kirsten Hesse
University of Kiel
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Helgoland Marine Research | 1999
K. Poremba; Urban Tillmann; Kirsten Hesse
Abstract Tidal variation of biological parameters was studied at three anchor stations in selected inlet channels of the northern German Wadden Sea in May and July 1994. Concentrations of bacteria, chlorophyll a and suspended matter as well as primary and bacterial production were assessed over a period of 25 h in the surface and in the bottom water. Diurnal variation in primary production was found both under in situ light conditions and under constant illumination. Tidal turbulence caused the introduction of detritus, bacteria and pigments from the sediment into the water column. The impact of sediment resuspension was most evident in the bottom water, leading to tidally oscillating bacterial production rates which were high during high stream velocity and low during the slack times. Estimations of the areal daily phytoplankton production and corresponding bacterial carbon demands were unbalanced. Primary production accounted for only 25–45% of the total bacterial carbon requirement. This discrepancy is due to the shallow euphotic depth in the Wadden Sea, allowing net primary production only in the upper 2–3 m of the water column, while the relatively high levels of bacterial activity do not show a vertical decline. Assuming that the specific biological activities in the water columns over the tidal flats are similar to those found in the inlet channels, it was found that production processes dominate in shallow areas whereas decomposition processes dominate in the deep channels. Moreover, the predominance of heterotrophic processes in the inlet channels means that additional organic carbon sources must contribute to the heterotrophic metabolism in the deep parts of the Wadden Sea, and that the horizontal flux of material is important in this turbid mesotidal ecosystem.
Estuaries | 1998
Urban Tillmann; Kirsten Hesse
To assess the importance of heterotrophic microplankton in the Wadden Sea, seasonal distribution and biomass of the main subgroups, that is, heterotrophic dinoflagellates, (separated into thecate and athecate forms), tintinnids, and aloricate ciliates, were studied in 1989 and 1990 in a total of six surveys covering the whole area of the northern German Wadden Sea. Heterotrophic microplankton biomass exhibited high spatial and temporal variation, ranging from 0 μg Cl−1 to 66 μg Cl−1, with maximum concentrations in spring., Mean stocks were lowest in winter (1.6 μg Cl−1) and highest in spring (11.7 μg Cl−1); intermediate concentrations were found in summer (8.5 μg Cl−1). In winter, the heterotrophic microplankton was dominated by tintinnids. In spring and summer, aloricate ciliates and dinoflagellates made up the largest part of the biomass. A pronounced feature was a shift within the dinoprotist group from athecate to thecate forms in summer. In spring, maxima of athecate dinoflagellate carbon were associated with blooms ofPhaeocystis globosa, indicating a close trophic relationship. From rough estimates of the daily grazing potential, based on microheterotrophic biomass and conversion factors from the literature, it may be concluded that heterotrophic microplankton temporarily share a main role in the transfer of food and energy to higher trophic levels within the pelagic system of the Wadden Sea.
Helgoland Marine Research | 1999
K. Poremba; Urban Tillmann; Kirsten Hesse
Abstract In a first synoptic evaluation, the temporal and spatial distribution of bacterioplankton and chlorophyll-a were determined in the German Wadden Sea. Three surveys were undertaken in winter, spring, and summer of 1994 using up to eight ships simultaneously between the river Ems and Sylt island. Despite intensive hydrodynamic mixing of the Wadden Sea water, spatial gradients were obvious. The abundance of bacterioplankton ranged from 0.4 to 26×105 ml–1 and chlorophyll-a varied between <0.1 and 79 µg l–1. In winter, relatively homogeneous distribution patterns of both parameters with small gradients were found. Highest chlorophyll-a values connected with a highly patchy structure were observed in spring, while in summer both total chlorophyll-a values and the complexity of the distribution pattern had decreased. In contrast, bacterial numbers increased steadily from January to July with the highest bacterial densities and greatest patchiness observed in summer. Moreover, in some regions of the Wadden Sea, a trophic succession of algae as carbon producers and bacteria as consumers was evident. Correlation analysis verified the relationship between bacteria and chlorophyll a, indicating bottom-up control of bacterial abundance in the northern part of the German Wadden Sea. Since the observed regression slope is remarkably low (0.12–0.46) compared to literature values (0.5–0.8), we suggest that the link between phytoplankton and bacteria found here is a special characteristic of the Wadden Sea as a transition zone between the coastal region and the outer North Sea.
EPIC3In: Lassus, P., Arzul, G., Erard, E., Gentien, P. & Marcaillou, C. (eds.) Harmful Marine algal Blooms. Lavoisier, Intercept Ltd, pp. 199-204 | 1995
S. Nehring; Kirsten Hesse; Urban Tillmann
EPIC3ICES C.M. 1995, T:8, 13 p. | 1995
Kirsten Hesse; Urban Tillmann; U. H. Brockmann
EPIC3Deutsche Hydrographische Zeitschrift 51, pp. 3-4 | 1999
H.-J. Rick; M. E. M. Baumann; S. Beddig; J. Bleil; S. Brasse; U. H. Brockmann; Friedrich Buchholz; S. Diel-Christiansen; U. Fehner; M. George; C. Kabatnik; Antje Klawon; R. Kopp; P. Koschinski; M. Krause; N. Ladwig; Kurt Poremba; Thomas Raabe; A. Reimer; T. Rieling; Silke Rick; K. Schaumann; Anette Tillmann; Urban Tillmann; D. N. Thomas; Anne Weber; G. Weide; G. Wolff; U. Gärtner; A. Göbel
EPIC3ICES Marine Science Symposia, 219, pp. 199-207 | 2003
N. Ladwig; Kirsten Hesse; Franciscus Colijn; Urban Tillmann
EPIC3Journal of Plankton Research, 22(7), pp. 1253-1276 | 2000
Urban Tillmann; Franciscus Colijn; Kirsten Hesse
EPIC3KUSTOS - TRANSWATT Meeting, Hamburg, 1997 | 1997
Johannes Rick; Claus-Dieter Dürselen; U. Gärtner; A. Göbel; Antje Klawon; M. E. M. Baumann; Silke Rick; T. Rieling; U. Fehner; P. Koschinski; C. Wolff; Urban Tillmann; K. Poremba; M. George; Kirsten Hesse; Anette Tillmann; Karsten Schaumann; G. Weide; Friedrich Buchholz; C. Mehrkühler; C. Kabatnik; R. Müller; A. Weber; M. Krause; S. Diel-Christiansen; R. Kopp; A. Reimer; S. Brasse; U. H. Brockmann; Thomas Raabe
EPIC3ECSA /ERF Meeting, The Netherlands, Middelburg, NL, 1996 | 1996
Claus-Dieter Dürselen; K. Poremba; Urban Tillmann; Johannes Rick; Kirsten Hesse; T. Rieling; U. Gärtner; A. Göbel; D. N. Thomas