We investigate the dynamical behaviour of a simple plankton population model, which explicitly simulates the concentrations
of nutrient, phytoplankton and zooplankton in the oceanic mixed layer. The model consists of three coupled ordinary differential
equations. We use analytical and numerical techniques, focusing on the existence and nature of steady states and unforced
oscillations (limit cycles) of the system. The oscillations arise from Hopf bifurcations, which are traced as each parameter
in the model is varied across a realistic range. The resulting bifurcation diagrams are compared with those from our previouswork,
where zooplankton mortality was simulated by a quadratic function—here we use a linear function, to represent alternative
ecological assumptions. Oscillations occur across broader ranges of parameters for the linear mortality function than for
the quadratic one, although the two sets of bifurcation diagrams show similar qualitative characteristics. The choice of zooplankton
mortality function, or closure term, is an area of current interest in the modelling community, and we relate our results
to simulations of other models.