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Data for: Distinct phytoplankton size classes respond differently to biotic and abiotic factors
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Swiss Federal Institute of Aquatic Science and Technology (Eawag) - view all
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Overview

The interplay between abiotic (resource supply, temperature) and biotic (grazing) factors determines growth and loss processes in phytoplankton through resource competition and trophic interactions, which are mediated by morphological traits like size. Here, we study the relative importance of grazers, water physics and chemistry on the daily net accumulation rates (AR) of individual phytoplankton from natural communities, grouped into six size classes from circa 10 to 500 μm. Using a Random Forest modelling approach and four years of daily data from a lake, we find that water temperature is generally a pivotal control of all phytoplankton AR. At the same time, nutrients and light are important for the smallest and the largest classes. Mesozooplankton abundance is a key predictor of the AR for small phytoplankton, with microzooplankton being important for the middle-size range. In our data, large and small phytoplankton have different (seasonal) blooming patterns: small forms are favoured by low temperature and grazing, and high phosphorus levels. Larger forms show positive ARs at high temperatures and low phosphorus (being relatively insensitive to zooplankton grazing). These results help us understand the opportunities and limitations of using size to explain and model phytoplankton responses to biotic and abiotic environmental change.

Daphniaammoniumcalanoid copepodsciliatescommunity dynamicscyclopoid copepodsdepth at 5 PARecological traitsepilimnetic temperatureimaginglake planktonmachine learningmixed layer depthnaupliinitratephosphatephytoplankton size classesrotiferssizethermocline depth
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Harvest Object Id67a78e72-c014-485b-9cb2-dcc16974c739
Harvest Source Idd0230d8d-fb2c-4caf-94e8-8ad52bd38ad9
Harvest Source TitleThe Eawag Research Data Institutional Repository
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