Carbon 13 measurements on dissolved inorganic carbon at the North Pacific (1969) Geosecs station

1970 ◽  
Vol 75 (36) ◽  
pp. 7668-7671 ◽  
Author(s):  
P. Kroopnick ◽  
W. G. Deuser ◽  
H. Craig
Author(s):  
Sayaka Yasunaka ◽  
Humio Mitsudera ◽  
Frank Whitney ◽  
Shin-ichiro Nakaoka

AbstractA compilation of surface water nutrient (phosphate, nitrate, and silicate) and partial pressure of CO2 (pCO2) observations from 1961 to 2016 reveals seasonal and interannual variability in the North Pacific. Nutrients and calculated dissolved inorganic carbon (DIC) reach maximum concentrations in March and minimum in August. Nutrient and DIC variability is in-phase (anti-phase) with changes in the mixed layer depth (sea surface temperature) north of 30 °N, and it is anti-phase (in-phase) with changes in Chl-a north of 40 °N (in 30 °N–40 °N). Seasonal drawdown of nutrients and DIC is larger toward the northwest and shows a local maximum in the boundary region between the subarctic and subtropics. Stoichiometric ratios of seasonal drawdown show that, compared to nitrate, silicate drawdown is large in the northwestern subarctic including the Bering and Okhotsk seas, and drawdown of carbon is larger toward the south. Net community production in mixed layer from March to July is estimated to be more than 6 gC/m2/mo in the boundary region between the subarctic and subtropics, the western subarctic, the Gulf of Alaska, and the Bering Sea. Nutrient and DIC concentrations vary with the Pacific Decadal Oscillation and the North Pacific Gyre Oscillation which cause changes in horizontal advection and vertical mixing. The DIC trend is positive in all analysis area and large in the western subtropics (> 1.0 μmol/l/yr). Averaged over the analysis area, it is increasing by 0.77 ± 0.03 μmol/l/yr (0.75 ± 0.02 μmol/kg/yr).


2013 ◽  
Vol 118 (8) ◽  
pp. 3843-3850 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sayaka Yasunaka ◽  
Yukihiro Nojiri ◽  
Shin-ichiro Nakaoka ◽  
Tsuneo Ono ◽  
Hitoshi Mukai ◽  
...  

2015 ◽  
Vol 12 (8) ◽  
pp. 5907-5940
Author(s):  
T. P. Sasse ◽  
B. I. McNeil ◽  
R. J. Matear ◽  
A. Lenton

Abstract. Ocean acidification is a predictable consequence of rising atmospheric carbon dioxide (CO2), and is highly likely to impact the entire marine ecosystem – from plankton at the base to fish at the top. Factors which are expected to be impacted include reproductive health, organism growth and species composition and distribution. Predicting when critical threshold values will be reached is crucial for projecting the future health of marine ecosystems and for marine resources planning and management. The impacts of ocean acidification will be first felt at the seasonal scale, however our understanding how seasonal variability will influence rates of future ocean acidification remains poorly constrained due to current model and data limitations. To address this issue, we first quantified the seasonal cycle of aragonite saturation state utilizing new data-based estimates of global ocean surface dissolved inorganic carbon and alkalinity. This seasonality was then combined with earth system model projections under different emissions scenarios (RCPs 2.6, 4.5 and 8.5) to provide new insights into future aragonite under-saturation onset. Under a high emissions scenario (RCP 8.5), our results suggest accounting for seasonality will bring forward the initial onset of month-long under-saturation by 17 years compared to annual-mean estimates, with differences extending up to 35 ± 17 years in the North Pacific due to strong regional seasonality. Our results also show large-scale under-saturation once atmospheric CO2 reaches 486 ppm in the North Pacific and 511 ppm in the Southern Ocean independent of emission scenario. Our results suggest that accounting for seasonality is critical to projecting the future impacts of ocean acidification on the marine environment.


2018 ◽  
Author(s):  
Robert T. Letscher ◽  
Tracy A. Villareal

Abstract. Summertime drawdown of dissolved inorganic carbon in the absence of measurable nutrients from the mixed layer and subsurface negative preformed nitrate (preNO3) anomalies observed for the ocean's subtropical gyres are two biogeochemical phenomena that have thus far eluded complete description. Many processes are thought to contribute including biological nitrogen fixation, lateral nutrient transport, carbon overconsumption or non-Redfield C : N : P organic matter cycling, heterotrophic nutrient uptake, and the actions of vertically migrating phytoplankton. Here we investigate the seasonal formation rates and potential contributing mechanisms for negative preformed nitrate anomalies (oxygen consumption without stoichiometric nitrate release) in the subsurface and positive preformed nitrate anomalies (oxygen production without stoichiometric nitrate drawdown) in the euphotic zone at the subtropical ocean time series stations ALOHA in the North Pacific and BATS in the North Atlantic. Non-Redfield −O2 : N stoichiometry for dissolved organic matter (DOM) remineralization is found to account for up to ~ 15 mmol N m−2 yr−1 of negative preNO3 anomaly formation at both stations. Residual negative preNO3 anomalies in excess of that which can be accounted for by non-Redfield DOM cycling are found to accumulate at a rate of ~ 32–46 mmol N m−2 yr−1 at station ALOHA and ~ 46–87 mmol N m−2 yr−1 at the BATS station. These negative anomaly formation rates are in approximate balance with positive preNO3 anomaly formation rates from the euphotic zone located immediately above the nutricline in the water column. Cycling of transparent exopolymer particles (TEP) and heterotrophic nitrate uptake can contribute to the formation of these preNO3 anomalies, however a significant fraction, estimated at ~ 50–95 %, is unexplained by the sum of these processes. Vertically migrating phytoplankton possess the necessary nutrient acquisition strategy and biogeochemical signature to quantitatively explain both the residual negative and positive preNO3 anomalies as well as the mixed layer dissolved inorganic carbon drawdown at stations ALOHA and BATS. TEP production by the model Rhizosolenia mat system could provide accelerated vertical transport of TEP as well as link the three processes together. Phytoplankton vertical migrators, although rare and easily overlooked, may play a large role in subtropical ocean nutrient cycling and the biological pump.


2015 ◽  
Vol 12 (20) ◽  
pp. 6017-6031 ◽  
Author(s):  
T. P. Sasse ◽  
B. I. McNeil ◽  
R. J. Matear ◽  
A. Lenton

Abstract. Ocean acidification is a predictable consequence of rising atmospheric carbon dioxide (CO2), and is highly likely to impact the entire marine ecosystem – from plankton at the base of the food chain to fish at the top. Factors which are expected to be impacted include reproductive health, organism growth and species composition and distribution. Predicting when critical threshold values will be reached is crucial for projecting the future health of marine ecosystems and for marine resources planning and management. The impacts of ocean acidification will be first felt at the seasonal scale, however our understanding how seasonal variability will influence rates of future ocean acidification remains poorly constrained due to current model and data limitations. To address this issue, we first quantified the seasonal cycle of aragonite saturation state utilizing new data-based estimates of global ocean-surface dissolved inorganic carbon and alkalinity. This seasonality was then combined with earth system model projections under different emissions scenarios (representative concentration pathways; RCPs 2.6, 4.5 and 8.5) to provide new insights into future aragonite undersaturation onset. Under a high emissions scenario (RCP 8.5), our results suggest accounting for seasonality will bring forward the initial onset of month-long undersaturation by 17 ± 10 years compared to annual-mean estimates, with differences extending up to 35 ± 16 years in the North Pacific due to strong regional seasonality. This earlier onset will result in large-scale undersaturation once atmospheric CO2 reaches 496 ppm in the North Pacific and 511 ppm in the Southern Ocean, independent of emission scenario. This work suggests accounting for seasonality is critical to projecting the future impacts of ocean acidification on the marine environment.


2018 ◽  
Vol 15 (21) ◽  
pp. 6461-6480 ◽  
Author(s):  
Robert T. Letscher ◽  
Tracy A. Villareal

Abstract. Summertime mixed-layer drawdown of dissolved inorganic carbon in the absence of measurable nutrients in the ocean's subtropical gyres and non-Redfieldian oxygen : nitrate relationships in the underlying subsurface waters are two biogeochemical phenomena that have thus far eluded complete description. Many processes are thought to contribute to one or both, including lateral nutrient transport, carbon overconsumption or non-Redfield C:N:P organic matter cycling, heterotrophic nutrient uptake, and the actions of vertically migrating phytoplankton. To obtain insight into the likely magnitude of potential contributing mechanisms that can remove nitrate from the nutricline while supporting dissolved inorganic carbon (DIC) drawdown tens of meters higher in the water column, we investigated the seasonal formation rates for negative preformed nitrate (preNO3) anomalies (oxygen consumption without stoichiometric nitrate release) in the subsurface and positive preformed nitrate anomalies (oxygen production without stoichiometric nitrate drawdown) in the euphotic zone at the subtropical ocean time series stations ALOHA (A Long-Term Oligotrophic Habitat Assessment) in the North Pacific and BATS (Bermuda Atlantic Time-series Study) in the North Atlantic. Non-Redfield -O2:N stoichiometry for dissolved organic matter (DOM) remineralization accounts for up to ∼15 mmol N m−2 yr−1 of negative preNO3 anomaly formation at both stations. We present a new formulation for calculating preNO3 (residual preNO3) that includes components resulting from non-Redfield DOM cycling. Residual negative preNO3 anomalies in excess of that which can be accounted for by non-Redfield DOM cycling are found to accumulate at a rate of ∼32–46 mmol N m−2 yr−1 at Station ALOHA and ∼46–87 mmol N m−2 yr−1 at the BATS station. These negative anomaly formation rates are in approximate balance with residual positive preNO3 anomaly formation rates from the euphotic zone located immediately above the nutricline in the water column. We evaluate three mechanisms to explain these anomalies, calculating that transparent exopolymer particle (TEP) cycling and heterotrophic nitrate uptake can contribute to the formation of both residual preNO3 anomalies. However, a significant fraction, estimated at ∼50 %–95 %, is unexplained by the sum of these processes. Vertically migrating phytoplankton possess the necessary distribution, nutrient acquisition strategy, and biogeochemical signature to simultaneously remove nitrate at depth and transport it above the nutricline. Reported transport rates by known migrators equal or exceed the residual preNO3 anomaly formation rates and potentially explain both the negative and positive residual preNO3 anomalies as well as the mixed-layer DIC drawdown at the stations ALOHA and BATS within the limits of scarce detailed abundance profiles. However, the three processes examined are not independent and mutually exclusive. The model Rhizosolenia mat system (and perhaps other migrators) produces TEPs, suggesting that migration could provide accelerated vertical transport of TEPs and provide labile carbon for heterotrophic nitrate uptake. These results based on geochemical distributions suggest that, in the absence of additional mechanisms and rates, phytoplankton vertical migrators, although rare and easily overlooked, play a larger role in subtropical ocean nutrient cycling and the biological pump than generally recognized.


2019 ◽  
Vol 617-618 ◽  
pp. 221-244 ◽  
Author(s):  
MR Baker ◽  
ME Matta ◽  
M Beaulieu ◽  
N Paris ◽  
S Huber ◽  
...  

Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document