Revisiting the distribution of oceanic N-2 fixation and estimating diazotrophic contribution to marine production

Marine N-2 fixation supports a significant portion of oceanic primary production by making N-2 bioavailable to planktonic communities, in the process influencing atmosphere-ocean carbon fluxes and our global climate. However, the geographical distribution and controlling factors of marine N-2 fixati...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Nature Communications
Main Authors: Tang, Weiyi, Wang, Seaver, Fonseca-Batista, Debany, Dehairs, Frank, Gifford, Scott, Gonzalez, Aridane G., Gallinari, Morgane, Planquette, Helene, Sarthou, Geraldine, Cassar, Nicolas
Other Authors: 57200721082, 57202609247, 56543736500, 7003910656, 23018622900, 37031064100, 23027776000, 22836555200, 6603306739, 6603417649
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: 2019
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10553/59375
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-019-08640-0
Description
Summary:Marine N-2 fixation supports a significant portion of oceanic primary production by making N-2 bioavailable to planktonic communities, in the process influencing atmosphere-ocean carbon fluxes and our global climate. However, the geographical distribution and controlling factors of marine N-2 fixation remain elusive largely due to sparse observations. Here we present unprecedented high-resolution underway N-2 fixation estimates across over 6000 kilometers of the western North Atlantic. Unexpectedly, we find increasing N-2 fixation rates from the oligotrophic Sargasso Sea to North America coastal waters, driven primarily by cyanobacterial diazotrophs. N-2 fixation is best correlated to phosphorus availability and chlorophylla concentration. Globally, intense N-2 fixation activity in the coastal oceans is validated by a meta-analysis of published observations and we estimate the annual coastal N-2 fixation flux to be 16.7 Tg N. This study broadens the biogeography of N-2 fixation, highlights the interplay of regulating factors, and reveals thriving diazotrophic communities in coastal waters with potential significance to the global nitrogen and carbon cycles.