Bacterioplankton distribution and production in the bathypelagic ocean: Directly coupled to particulate organic carbon export?

A recently published evaluation of bacterioplankton abundance and productivity in the bathypelagic North Pacific suggests that these properties are generally coupled with particulate organic carbon (POC) fluxes. In that analysis, bacterial biomass and productivity were several-fold greater in subarc...

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Main Authors: D. A. Hansell, H. W. Ducklow
Other Authors: The Pennsylvania State University CiteSeerX Archives
Format: Text
Language:English
Subjects:
Online Access:http://citeseerx.ist.psu.edu/viewdoc/summary?doi=10.1.1.391.9420
http://yyy.rsmas.miami.edu/groups/biogeochem/Hansell pdfs/42 Hansell.pdf
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spelling ftciteseerx:oai:CiteSeerX.psu:10.1.1.391.9420 2023-05-15T18:28:30+02:00 Bacterioplankton distribution and production in the bathypelagic ocean: Directly coupled to particulate organic carbon export? D. A. Hansell H. W. Ducklow The Pennsylvania State University CiteSeerX Archives application/pdf http://citeseerx.ist.psu.edu/viewdoc/summary?doi=10.1.1.391.9420 http://yyy.rsmas.miami.edu/groups/biogeochem/Hansell pdfs/42 Hansell.pdf en eng http://citeseerx.ist.psu.edu/viewdoc/summary?doi=10.1.1.391.9420 http://yyy.rsmas.miami.edu/groups/biogeochem/Hansell pdfs/42 Hansell.pdf Metadata may be used without restrictions as long as the oai identifier remains attached to it. http://yyy.rsmas.miami.edu/groups/biogeochem/Hansell pdfs/42 Hansell.pdf text ftciteseerx 2016-01-08T02:17:49Z A recently published evaluation of bacterioplankton abundance and productivity in the bathypelagic North Pacific suggests that these properties are generally coupled with particulate organic carbon (POC) fluxes. In that analysis, bacterial biomass and productivity were several-fold greater in subarctic than subtropical waters, consistent with the basin-scale distribution of POC flux and suggestive of a sinking POC-e DOC-X bacteria transformation of the carbon. To test this hypothesis, we sought to determine whether the very strong spatial and temporal gradients in POC flux in the Arabian Sea would force similar deep-ocean gradients in bacterial variables. On both a withinand between-cruise basis, there was variability in bacterial abundance and thymidine incorporation in the deep Arabian Sea, but correspondence was equivocal between these variables and several correlates to export: flux of biogenic carbon from the euphotic zone, state of the monsoon, and proximity to productive coastal upwelling zones. However, when annual mean bacterial abundance at 2,000 m was compared with annual POC flux at that depth, a strong correspondence emerged: high annual flux supported high bacterial abundance (such a correspondence was not found for bacterial productivity). This finding suggests that bathypelagic bacterial abundance responds to the long-term mean input of organic matter and less to episodic inputs. A comparative evaluation of the North Pacific revealed that although the bathypelagic bacteria there showed correspondence to deep POC flux, that variable alone Text Subarctic Unknown Pacific
institution Open Polar
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description A recently published evaluation of bacterioplankton abundance and productivity in the bathypelagic North Pacific suggests that these properties are generally coupled with particulate organic carbon (POC) fluxes. In that analysis, bacterial biomass and productivity were several-fold greater in subarctic than subtropical waters, consistent with the basin-scale distribution of POC flux and suggestive of a sinking POC-e DOC-X bacteria transformation of the carbon. To test this hypothesis, we sought to determine whether the very strong spatial and temporal gradients in POC flux in the Arabian Sea would force similar deep-ocean gradients in bacterial variables. On both a withinand between-cruise basis, there was variability in bacterial abundance and thymidine incorporation in the deep Arabian Sea, but correspondence was equivocal between these variables and several correlates to export: flux of biogenic carbon from the euphotic zone, state of the monsoon, and proximity to productive coastal upwelling zones. However, when annual mean bacterial abundance at 2,000 m was compared with annual POC flux at that depth, a strong correspondence emerged: high annual flux supported high bacterial abundance (such a correspondence was not found for bacterial productivity). This finding suggests that bathypelagic bacterial abundance responds to the long-term mean input of organic matter and less to episodic inputs. A comparative evaluation of the North Pacific revealed that although the bathypelagic bacteria there showed correspondence to deep POC flux, that variable alone
author2 The Pennsylvania State University CiteSeerX Archives
format Text
author D. A. Hansell
H. W. Ducklow
spellingShingle D. A. Hansell
H. W. Ducklow
Bacterioplankton distribution and production in the bathypelagic ocean: Directly coupled to particulate organic carbon export?
author_facet D. A. Hansell
H. W. Ducklow
author_sort D. A. Hansell
title Bacterioplankton distribution and production in the bathypelagic ocean: Directly coupled to particulate organic carbon export?
title_short Bacterioplankton distribution and production in the bathypelagic ocean: Directly coupled to particulate organic carbon export?
title_full Bacterioplankton distribution and production in the bathypelagic ocean: Directly coupled to particulate organic carbon export?
title_fullStr Bacterioplankton distribution and production in the bathypelagic ocean: Directly coupled to particulate organic carbon export?
title_full_unstemmed Bacterioplankton distribution and production in the bathypelagic ocean: Directly coupled to particulate organic carbon export?
title_sort bacterioplankton distribution and production in the bathypelagic ocean: directly coupled to particulate organic carbon export?
url http://citeseerx.ist.psu.edu/viewdoc/summary?doi=10.1.1.391.9420
http://yyy.rsmas.miami.edu/groups/biogeochem/Hansell pdfs/42 Hansell.pdf
geographic Pacific
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genre Subarctic
genre_facet Subarctic
op_source http://yyy.rsmas.miami.edu/groups/biogeochem/Hansell pdfs/42 Hansell.pdf
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http://yyy.rsmas.miami.edu/groups/biogeochem/Hansell pdfs/42 Hansell.pdf
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