Bulk vs. aminoacid stable N isotope estimations of metabolic status and contributions of nitrogen fixation to size-fractionated zooplankton biomass in the subtropical N Atlantic.

A comparative analysis of natural abundance of stable N isotopes (δ15N) in individual amino acids and bulk organicmatter of size-fractionated plankton revealed the differential impact of nitrogen fixation through the food web in a transect across the subtropical North Atlantic. All δ15N measurements...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Deep Sea Research Part I: Oceanographic Research Papers
Main Authors: Mompeán-de-la-Rosa, M.C. (María del Carmen), Bode, A. (Antonio), Gier, E., McCarthy, M.D.
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Centro Oceanográfico de A Coruña
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Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10508/10152
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.dsr.2016.05.005
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Summary:A comparative analysis of natural abundance of stable N isotopes (δ15N) in individual amino acids and bulk organicmatter of size-fractionated plankton revealed the differential impact of nitrogen fixation through the food web in a transect across the subtropical North Atlantic. All δ15N measurements showed low values in the central region, followed by the western zone, while maximum δ15N values were found in the Eastern zone.These results were consistent with the prevalence of nitrogen fixation in the central and western zones, and the influence of the west Africa upwelling in the Eastern zone. Use of compound- specific amino acid isotope data (CSI-AA) revealed relatively low variability in the impact of diazotrophic nitrogen within the different plankton size fractions,while δ15N of bulk organic matter showed high variabilitywith size.Explicit CSI-AA trophic position estimates showed a small increase with mean plankton size class and varied in a relatively narrow range (1.8–2.5), with the lowest values in the central zone. High correlations between bulk plankton δ15N and individual amino acids (in particular Phe and Thr), as well as reconstructed total protein δ15N values,suggest a set of new relationships that may be important to tracing direct plankton contributions to nitrogen recycling in the ocean, including detrital organic nitrogen pools.Overall,these new results represent the most detailed investigation of CSI-AA data in plankton size clases to date, and indicated a greater importance of diazotrophic N than suggested by concurrent measurements of bulk δ15N, abundance of large nitrogen fixing organisms or nitrogen fixation rates. Malaspina-2010(CSD2008-00077), programa CONSOLIDER-INGENIO2010, NSF Grant OCE-1131816 Versión del editor 2,4210