Particulate cadmium stable isotopes in the subarctic northeast Pacific reveal dynamic Cd cycling and a new isotopically light Cd sink

The nutrient-type distribution of dissolved cadmium concentrations (dCd) reflects a biological control in the global ocean, with uptake of dissolved Cd into biogenic particles in surface waters and regeneration of particulate Cd at depth. Depth profiles of dissolved Cd stable isotope composition (d)...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Earth and Planetary Science Letters
Main Authors: Janssen, D., Abouchami, W., Galer, S., Purdon, K., Cullen, J.
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: 2019
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Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/21.11116/0000-0003-ECAE-0
Description
Summary:The nutrient-type distribution of dissolved cadmium concentrations (dCd) reflects a biological control in the global ocean, with uptake of dissolved Cd into biogenic particles in surface waters and regeneration of particulate Cd at depth. Depth profiles of dissolved Cd stable isotope composition (d), while sparse in coverage, exist for most of the major ocean basins, with spatial coverage improving through the efforts of the GEOTRACES program. However, a dearth of similarly resolved particulate (pCd) distributions limits our ability to use stable Cd isotopes to better understand Cd cycling in the global ocean. Here we present two p depth profiles from the subarctic northeast Pacific which demonstrate more complex cycling than dissolved profiles would suggest. Surface p , while lighter than surface dCd, is heavy relative to Pacific deepwater and crustal p components. Surface particulate and dissolved distributions are not well explained by closed-system Rayleigh fractionation following a single fractionation factor, in agreement with other recent studies in the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans. These variable fractionation trends in surface waters complicate the potential utility of as a paleoproductivity proxy. Particulate becomes lighter as particulate Cd is remineralized in the nutricline, reaching a minimum p of around −0.5‰, among the lightest values reported in natural telluric samples. This pCd trend within the nutricline might be explained by (1) multiple pools of particulate Cd with different isotopic compositions and labilities, or (2) by fractionation during particulate Cd remineralization. The observed shallow loss of heavy p above the winter mixed layer, rather than the formation of especially light surface p, may help to maintain the observed surface-to-deep d gradient. Below the mid-depth p minimum, p increases with depth toward the deepwater d value, possibly reflecting an isotopic equilibration between the particulate and dissolved phases. Dissolved profiles show uniform isotope composition at ...