• Always ready? Primary production of Arctic phytoplankton at the end of the polar night 

      Hoppe, Clara J. M.ORCIDiD (Limnology and Oceanography Letters, 2021-11-11)
      The end of the polar night with the concurrent onset of photosynthetic biomass production ultimately leads to the spring bloom, which represents the most important event of primary production for the Arctic marine ecosystem. ...
    • Nutrient regulation of late spring phytoplankton blooms in the midlatitude North Atlantic 

      Browning, Thomas J.ORCIDiD; Al-Hashem, Ali A.; Hopwood, Mark J.ORCIDiD; Engel, AnjaORCIDiD; Wakefield, Ewan D.; Achterberg, Eric P.ORCIDiD (Limnology and Oceanography, 2019)
      The duration and magnitude of the North Atlantic spring bloom impacts both higher trophic levels and oceanic carbon sequestration. Nutrient exhaustion offers a general explanation for bloom termination, but detail on which ...
    • Presence of a resident species aids invader evolution 

      Lachapelle, JosianneORCIDiD; Bestion, ElvireORCIDiD; Jackson, Eleanor E.ORCIDiD; Schaum, C.‐ElisaORCIDiD (Limnology and Oceanography, 2022-08-09)
      Interactions between phytoplankton species shape their physiological and evolutionary responses. Yet, studies addressing the evolutionary responses of phytoplankton in changing environments often lack an explicit element ...
    • Temporal declines in Wadden Sea phytoplankton cell volumes observed within and across species 

      Hillebrand, HelmutORCIDiD; Antonucci Di Carvalho, JosieORCIDiD; Dajka, Jan‐ClaasORCIDiD; Dürselen, Claus‐Dieter; Kerimoglu, OnurORCIDiD; Kuczynski, LucieORCIDiD; Rönn, Lena; Ryabov, AlexeyORCIDiD (Limnology and Oceanography, 2021-12-27)
      Cell size is a master trait in the functional ecology of phytoplankton correlating with numerous morphological, physiological, and life‐cycle characteristics of species that constrain their nutrient use, growth, and ...