Amino acids in the interstitial waters from ODP Hole 113-695A

Site 695 lies on the southeast margin of the South Orkney microcontinent on the northern margin of the Weddell Sea, at 62°23.48'S, 43°27.10'W in 1305 m water depth. The inorganic properties of interstitial waters at this site, including sulfate reduction, biogenic methane production, and h...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Kawahata, Hodaka, Ishizuka, Toshio, Nagao, Toshiyasu
Format: Dataset
Language:English
Published: PANGAEA 1990
Subjects:
ODP
Online Access:https://doi.pangaea.de/10.1594/PANGAEA.754263
https://doi.org/10.1594/PANGAEA.754263
Description
Summary:Site 695 lies on the southeast margin of the South Orkney microcontinent on the northern margin of the Weddell Sea, at 62°23.48'S, 43°27.10'W in 1305 m water depth. The inorganic properties of interstitial waters at this site, including sulfate reduction, biogenic methane production, and high concentrations of ammonia and phosphate, imply high microbial activity. However, no clear relationship between amino acid composition and concentration and the type of microbial activity (e.g., sulfate reduction or methane production) can be identified. The THAA (total hydrolyzable amino acids) values range between 2.45 and 17.31 µmol/L, averaging 7.14 µmol/L. The mean concentrations and relative abundance values of acidic, basic, neutral, aromatic, and sulfur-containing amino acids are 1.34 (18%), 1.09 (15%), 3.93 (54%), 0.50 (8%), and 0.02 (0%) µmol/L, respectively. Glycine is the most abundant amino acid residue, with serine, glutamic acid, and ornithine next. The DFAA (dissolved free amino acids) values range from 0.10 to 12.73 µmol/L, averaging 4.07 µmol/L. The acidic, basic, neutral, aromatic, and sulfurcontaining amino acids are on average 0.21, 0.79, 2.56, 0.41, and 0.01 µmol/L, respectively. The relative abundances of acidic, basic, neutral, and aromatic amino acids average 4%, 18%, 58%, and 15%, respectively. Predominance of DFAA over DCAA (dissolved combined amino acids) in interstitial waters of Lithologic Units I and II is contrary to the predominance of DCAA over DFAA in other interstitial waters and seawater. The comparison of amino acid compositions between DCAA and siliceous plankton suggests that the DCAA in interstitial waters originally comes from amino acids derived from siliceous plankton. However, other sources which are much enriched in glutamic acid contribute to the DCAA composition.