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Long-term variation in phytoplankton communities under the impact of anthropogenic activities and climate change in the southern Yellow Sea
Phytoplankton; long-term variation; environmental changes; diatoms; dinoflagellates; southern Yellow Sea
Session 13 - Coastal Environmental Ecology under anthropogenic activities and natural changes
Abstract Accepted
We obtained historical and observational data on phytoplankton communities from 1959 to 2023 to explore the responses of phytoplankton community structure to long-term environmental changes in the southern Yellow Sea (SYS), China. The results revealed a decrease in the proportions of diatom cell abundance within the phytoplankton community by 8%, accompanied by a corresponding increase in that of dinoflagellates. Dominant phytoplankton species were mainly chain-forming diatoms before 2000, and large dinoflagellates species from the genera Ceratium and Noctiluca improved their dominance after 2000. Warm-water phytoplankton species have increased in dominance over the study period. Correlation analysis revealed that the ocean warming and alterations in nutrient structure (N/P and Si/N ratios) were mostly responsible for the long-term evolution trend, and these changes may result in an increase in dinoflagellates harmful algal blooms, reduced efficiency of the biological carbon pump, and heightened hypoxia in the future, which should draw our attention.