Phytoplankton assemblages from seasonally sea-ice covered Ryder Bay (Adelaide Island, Antarctica) were studied over three
austral summers (2004–2007), to link sea-ice variability and environmental conditions with algal speciation. Typical of near-shore
Antarctic waters, biomass was dominated by large diatoms, although the prymnesiophyte
Phaeocystis antarctica was numerically dominant. Although there was considerable interannual variability between main diatom species, high biomass
of certain species or species groups corresponded consistently to certain phases of seasonal progression. We present the first
documentation of an extensive bloom of the late-season diatom
Proboscia inermis in February 2006, accounting for over 90% of diatom biomass. At this time, water column stratification and nutrient drawdown
were high relative to other periods of the study, although carbon export was relatively low. Melt water flux in this region
promotes well-stratified surface waters and high chlorophyll levels, but not necessarily concurrent increases in export production
relative to seasons with lower freshwater inputs.
Keywords Diatoms - Phytoplankton - Seasonality - Sea-ice - Coastal Antarctic -
Proboscia inermis