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Dive into the research topics where Laura C. Lubelczyk is active.

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Featured researches published by Laura C. Lubelczyk.


Science | 2012

Massive phytoplankton blooms under Arctic Sea ice

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.


Global Biogeochemical Cycles | 2016

Factors regulating the Great Calcite Belt in the Southern Ocean and its biogeochemical significance

William M. Balch; Nicholas R. Bates; Phoebe J. Lam; Benjamin S. Twining; Sarah Z. Rosengard; Bruce C. Bowler; David T. Drapeau; Rebecca Garley; Laura C. Lubelczyk; Catherine Mitchell; Sara Rauschenberg

The Great Calcite Belt (GCB) is a region of elevated surface reflectance in the Southern Ocean (SO) covering ~16% of the global ocean and is thought to result from elevated, seasonal concentrations of coccolithophores. Here we describe field observations and experiments from two cruises that crossed the GCB in the Atlantic and Indian sectors of the SO. We confirm the presence of coccolithophores, their coccoliths, and associated optical scattering, located primarily in the region of the subtropical, Agulhas, and Subantarctic frontal regions. Coccolithophore-rich regions were typically associated with high-velocity frontal regions with higher seawater partial pressures of CO2 (pCO2) than the atmosphere, sufficient to reverse the direction of gas exchange to a CO2 source. There was no calcium carbonate (CaCO3) enhancement of particulate organic carbon (POC) export, but there were increased POC transfer efficiencies in high-flux particulate inorganic carbon regions. Contemporaneous observations are synthesized with results of trace-metal incubation experiments, 234Th-based flux estimates, and remotely sensed observations to generate a mandala that summarizes our understanding about the factors that regulate the location of the GCB.


Global Biogeochemical Cycles | 2016

Toward a quantitative and empirical dissolved organic carbon budget for the Gulf of Maine, a semienclosed shelf sea

William M. Balch; Thomas G. Huntington; George R. Aiken; David T. Drapeau; Bruce C. Bowler; Laura C. Lubelczyk; Kenna D. Butler

A time series of organic carbon export from Gulf of Maine (GoM) watersheds was compared to a time series of biological, chemical, bio-optical, and hydrographic properties, measured across the GoMbetween Yarmouth, NS, Canada, and Portland, ME, U.S. Optical proxies were used to quantify the dissolved organic carbon (DOC) and particulate organic carbon in the GoM. The Load Estimator regression model applied to river discharge data demonstrated that riverine DOC export (and its decadal variance) has increased over the last 80 years. Several extraordinarily wet years (2006–2010) resulted in a massive pulse of chromophoric dissolved organic matter (CDOM; proxy for DOC) into the western GoM along with unidentified optically scattering material (<0.2μmdiameter). A survey of DOC in the GoM and Scotian Shelf showed the strong influence of the Gulf of Saint Lawrence on the DOC that enters the GoM. A deep plume of CDOM-rich water was observed near the coast of Maine which decreased in concentration eastward. The Forel-Ule color scale was derived and compared to the same measurements made in 1912–1913 by Henry Bigelow. Results show that the GoM has yellowed in the last century, particularly in the region of the extension of the Eastern Maine Coastal Current. Time lags between DOC discharge and its appearance in the GoM increased with distance from the river mouths. Algae were also a significant source of DOC but not CDOM. Gulf-wide algal primary production has decreased. Increases in precipitation and DOC discharge to the GoM are predicted over the next century.


Global Biogeochemical Cycles | 2018

Vertical Distributions of Coccolithophores, PIC, POC, Biogenic Silica, and Chlorophyll a Throughout the Global Ocean

William M. Balch; Bruce C. Bowler; David T. Drapeau; Laura C. Lubelczyk; Emily Lyczkowski

Abstract Coccolithophores are a critical component of global biogeochemistry, export fluxes, and seawater optical properties. We derive globally significant relationships to estimate integrated coccolithophore and coccolith concentrations as well as integrated concentrations of particulate inorganic carbon (PIC) from their respective surface concentration. We also examine surface versus integral relationships for other biogeochemical variables contributed by all phytoplankton (e.g., chlorophyll a and particulate organic carbon) or diatoms (biogenic silica). Integrals are calculated using both 100 m integrals and euphotic zone integrals (depth of 1% surface photosynthetically available radiation). Surface concentrations are parameterized in either volumetric units (e.g., m−3) or values integrated over the top optical depth. Various relationships between surface concentrations and integrated values demonstrate that when surface concentrations are above a specific threshold, the vertical distribution of the property is biased to the surface layer, and when surface concentrations are below a specific threshold, the vertical distributions of the properties are biased to subsurface maxima. Results also show a highly predictable decrease in explained‐variance as vertical distributions become more vertically heterogeneous. These relationships have fundamental utility for extrapolating surface ocean color remote sensing measurements to 100 m depth or to the base of the euphotic zone, well beyond the depths of detection for passive ocean color remote sensors. Greatest integrated concentrations of PIC, coccoliths, and coccolithophores are found when there is moderate stratification at the base of the euphotic zone.


Scientific Reports | 2018

Coccolith dissolution within copepod guts affects fecal pellet density and sinking rate

Meredith M. White; Jesica D. Waller; Laura C. Lubelczyk; David T. Drapeau; Bruce C. Bowler; William M. Balch; David M. Fields

The most common biomineral produced in the contemporary ocean is calcium carbonate, including the polymorph calcite produced by coccolithophores. The surface waters of the ocean are supersaturated with respect to calcium carbonate. As a result, particulate inorganic carbon (PIC), such as calcite coccoliths, is not expected thermodynamically to dissolve in waters above the lysocline (~4500–6000 m). However, observations indicate that up to 60–80% of calcium carbonate is lost in the upper 500–1000 m of the ocean. This is hypothesized to occur in microenvironments with reduced saturation states, such as zooplankton guts. Using a new application of the highly precise 14C microdiffusion technique, we show that following a period of starvation, up to 38% of ingested calcite dissolves in copepod guts. After continued feeding, our data show the gut becomes increasingly buffered, which limits further dissolution; this has been termed the Tums hypothesis (after the drugstore remedy for stomach acid). As less calcite dissolves in the gut and is instead egested in fecal pellets, the fecal pellet sinking rates double, with corresponding increases in pellet density. Our results empirically demonstrate that zooplankton guts can facilitate calcite dissolution above the chemical lysocline, and that carbon export through fecal pellet production is variable, based on the feeding history of the copepod.


Limnology and Oceanography | 2014

Surface biological, chemical, and optical properties of the Patagonian Shelf coccolithophore bloom, the brightest waters of the Great Calcite Belt

William M. Balch; David T. Drapeau; Bruce C. Bowler; Emily Lyczkowski; Laura C. Lubelczyk; Stuart C. Painter; Alex J. Poulton


Deep-sea Research Part Ii-topical Studies in Oceanography | 2014

Aerial extent, composition, bio-optics and biogeochemistry of a massive under-ice algal bloom in the Arctic

William M. Balch; Bruce C. Bowler; Laura C. Lubelczyk; M.W. Stevens


Biogeosciences | 2017

The influence of environmental variability on the biogeography of coccolithophores and diatoms in the Great Calcite Belt

Helen E. K. Smith; Alex J. Poulton; Rebecca Garley; Jason Hopkins; Laura C. Lubelczyk; Dave T. Drapeau; Sara Rauschenberg; Ben S. Twining; Nicholas R. Bates; William M. Balch


Marine Ecology Progress Series | 2018

Calcification of an estuarine coccolithophore increases with ocean acidification when subjected to diurnally fluctuating carbonate chemistry

Meredith M. White; David T. Drapeau; Laura C. Lubelczyk; Victoria C. Abel; Bruce C. Bowler; William M. Balch


Journal of Applied Phycology | 2018

Inter-laboratory validation of the serial dilution culture—most probable number method for enumerating viable phytoplankton

Hugh L. MacIntyre; John J. Cullen; Shannah Rastin; Magdalena Waclawik; Kimberly J. Franklin; Nicole J. Poulton; Laura C. Lubelczyk; Kate McPhee; Tammi L. Richardson; Elise Van Meerssche; Brian Petri

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William M. Balch

Bigelow Laboratory For Ocean Sciences

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Bruce C. Bowler

Bigelow Laboratory For Ocean Sciences

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David T. Drapeau

Bigelow Laboratory For Ocean Sciences

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Nicholas R. Bates

Bermuda Institute of Ocean Sciences

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Rebecca Garley

Bermuda Institute of Ocean Sciences

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Emily Lyczkowski

Bigelow Laboratory For Ocean Sciences

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Sara Rauschenberg

Bigelow Laboratory For Ocean Sciences

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Benjamin S. Twining

Bigelow Laboratory For Ocean Sciences

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Catherine Mitchell

Bigelow Laboratory For Ocean Sciences

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Dave T. Drapeau

Bigelow Laboratory For Ocean Sciences

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