RRS Discovery Cruise 369, 09 Aug -15 Sep 2011. Influence of advection and sedimentation on linking microbial phosphorus, carbon and nitrogen cycling in the North Atlantic subtropical gyre (LINK)

This physics-led biogeochemical cruise to the North Atlantic subtropical gyre was designed to field test a prevailing hypothesis that open ocean ecosystems are in steady state. We aimed to study microbial community composition, spatial distribution and functioning in the photic and twilight zones, a...

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Main Author: Zubkov, M.V.
Other Authors: Hill, P.G.
Format: Book
Language:English
Published: National Oceanography Centre 2012
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.soton.ac.uk/301170/
https://eprints.soton.ac.uk/301170/1/NOC_CR_11.pdf
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spelling ftsouthampton:oai:eprints.soton.ac.uk:301170 2024-04-28T08:30:26+00:00 RRS Discovery Cruise 369, 09 Aug -15 Sep 2011. Influence of advection and sedimentation on linking microbial phosphorus, carbon and nitrogen cycling in the North Atlantic subtropical gyre (LINK) Zubkov, M.V. Hill, P.G. 2012-02 text https://eprints.soton.ac.uk/301170/ https://eprints.soton.ac.uk/301170/1/NOC_CR_11.pdf en eng National Oceanography Centre https://eprints.soton.ac.uk/301170/1/NOC_CR_11.pdf Zubkov, M.V. and et al, , Hill, P.G. (ed.) (2012) RRS Discovery Cruise 369, 09 Aug -15 Sep 2011. Influence of advection and sedimentation on linking microbial phosphorus, carbon and nitrogen cycling in the North Atlantic subtropical gyre (LINK) (National Oceanography Centre Cruise Report, 11) Southampton, UK. National Oceanography Centre 190pp. Monograph NonPeerReviewed 2012 ftsouthampton 2024-04-09T23:34:29Z This physics-led biogeochemical cruise to the North Atlantic subtropical gyre was designed to field test a prevailing hypothesis that open ocean ecosystems are in steady state. We aimed to study microbial community composition, spatial distribution and functioning in the photic and twilight zones, and to put this information into context with physical and chemical characterisation of the sampling region, with additional information on carbon export from the euphotic zone. Underway sampling followed by flow cytometry was used to assess mesoscale spatial variability of microorganisms. Coarse-scale (CTD) and fine-scale (PumpCast profiler) vertical distribution of microorganisms was determined, with dominant microbial prokaryotic and eukaryotic groups quantified by flow cytometry. Abundance of larger microplankton organisms was assessed using the size-fractionating net (Micronet) and FlowCam microscope. Groupspecific uptake of bicarbonate, phosphate and different nitrogen compounds was determined and group-specific production and grazing assessed using flow sorting. The ambient turnover rates of phosphate, organic phosphorus and labile dissolved organic matter, e.g. amino acids, was bioassayed. Microbial respiration in the twilight zone was studied using radioactive tracing in a deep-water in situ incubator. Physical and chemical parameters were measured during the cruise in order to put microbial community data into context. A ship mounted ADCP was used to collect information about physical, mesoscale spatial context; by combining with turbulence profiler data, SeaSoar profiler data, and data collected during intensive CTD sampling for dissolved inorganic nutrients, we aim to estimate mesoscale nutrient fluxes into the photic zone. PELAGRA neutral buoyancy sediment traps were used to estimate biogenic sedimentation. Samples were collected for particulate calcite, opal, and POM measurements, together with the isotopic composition of PON. The cruise achieved its main goal of collecting data that will allow us to link ... Book North Atlantic University of Southampton: e-Prints Soton
institution Open Polar
collection University of Southampton: e-Prints Soton
op_collection_id ftsouthampton
language English
description This physics-led biogeochemical cruise to the North Atlantic subtropical gyre was designed to field test a prevailing hypothesis that open ocean ecosystems are in steady state. We aimed to study microbial community composition, spatial distribution and functioning in the photic and twilight zones, and to put this information into context with physical and chemical characterisation of the sampling region, with additional information on carbon export from the euphotic zone. Underway sampling followed by flow cytometry was used to assess mesoscale spatial variability of microorganisms. Coarse-scale (CTD) and fine-scale (PumpCast profiler) vertical distribution of microorganisms was determined, with dominant microbial prokaryotic and eukaryotic groups quantified by flow cytometry. Abundance of larger microplankton organisms was assessed using the size-fractionating net (Micronet) and FlowCam microscope. Groupspecific uptake of bicarbonate, phosphate and different nitrogen compounds was determined and group-specific production and grazing assessed using flow sorting. The ambient turnover rates of phosphate, organic phosphorus and labile dissolved organic matter, e.g. amino acids, was bioassayed. Microbial respiration in the twilight zone was studied using radioactive tracing in a deep-water in situ incubator. Physical and chemical parameters were measured during the cruise in order to put microbial community data into context. A ship mounted ADCP was used to collect information about physical, mesoscale spatial context; by combining with turbulence profiler data, SeaSoar profiler data, and data collected during intensive CTD sampling for dissolved inorganic nutrients, we aim to estimate mesoscale nutrient fluxes into the photic zone. PELAGRA neutral buoyancy sediment traps were used to estimate biogenic sedimentation. Samples were collected for particulate calcite, opal, and POM measurements, together with the isotopic composition of PON. The cruise achieved its main goal of collecting data that will allow us to link ...
author2 Hill, P.G.
format Book
author Zubkov, M.V.
spellingShingle Zubkov, M.V.
RRS Discovery Cruise 369, 09 Aug -15 Sep 2011. Influence of advection and sedimentation on linking microbial phosphorus, carbon and nitrogen cycling in the North Atlantic subtropical gyre (LINK)
author_facet Zubkov, M.V.
author_sort Zubkov, M.V.
title RRS Discovery Cruise 369, 09 Aug -15 Sep 2011. Influence of advection and sedimentation on linking microbial phosphorus, carbon and nitrogen cycling in the North Atlantic subtropical gyre (LINK)
title_short RRS Discovery Cruise 369, 09 Aug -15 Sep 2011. Influence of advection and sedimentation on linking microbial phosphorus, carbon and nitrogen cycling in the North Atlantic subtropical gyre (LINK)
title_full RRS Discovery Cruise 369, 09 Aug -15 Sep 2011. Influence of advection and sedimentation on linking microbial phosphorus, carbon and nitrogen cycling in the North Atlantic subtropical gyre (LINK)
title_fullStr RRS Discovery Cruise 369, 09 Aug -15 Sep 2011. Influence of advection and sedimentation on linking microbial phosphorus, carbon and nitrogen cycling in the North Atlantic subtropical gyre (LINK)
title_full_unstemmed RRS Discovery Cruise 369, 09 Aug -15 Sep 2011. Influence of advection and sedimentation on linking microbial phosphorus, carbon and nitrogen cycling in the North Atlantic subtropical gyre (LINK)
title_sort rrs discovery cruise 369, 09 aug -15 sep 2011. influence of advection and sedimentation on linking microbial phosphorus, carbon and nitrogen cycling in the north atlantic subtropical gyre (link)
publisher National Oceanography Centre
publishDate 2012
url https://eprints.soton.ac.uk/301170/
https://eprints.soton.ac.uk/301170/1/NOC_CR_11.pdf
genre North Atlantic
genre_facet North Atlantic
op_relation https://eprints.soton.ac.uk/301170/1/NOC_CR_11.pdf
Zubkov, M.V. and et al, , Hill, P.G. (ed.) (2012) RRS Discovery Cruise 369, 09 Aug -15 Sep 2011. Influence of advection and sedimentation on linking microbial phosphorus, carbon and nitrogen cycling in the North Atlantic subtropical gyre (LINK) (National Oceanography Centre Cruise Report, 11) Southampton, UK. National Oceanography Centre 190pp.
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