Guidelines for monitoring of chlorophyll a
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Authors
Authors (organizational units)
Publication date
2016
Last Review
Abstract
Increase in phytoplankton biomass is a direct consequence of advancing eutrophication. For monitoring
purposes, phytoplankton biomass is estimated by chlorophyll a (Chl a) concentration.
The amount of Chl a is not a direct proxy for phytoplankton biomass because of a highly variable ratio of
cellular carbon to Chl a in phytoplankton (Geider 1987). Phytoplankton biomass, except for picoplankton, is
more accurately assessed by quantitative taxonomical analysis. It is, however, laborious and thus provides
with a smaller amount of data than the Chl a method, which lowers the status confidence of any taxonomybased indicator. Regardless of its shortcomings, the Chl a method ‒ being easy to sample and fast to
analyze ‒ is the method of choice for environmental studies.
The scope of this guideline is the determination of Chl a concentration; measured from water samples
using wet analytics as well as estimated from in vivo Chl a fluorescence recordings.