Exploring the composition of macromolecular organic matter in Arctic Ocean sediments under a changing sea ice gradient

© 2019 Elsevier B.V. Arctic sea ice has been affected by climate change, leading to reductions in summer sea ice extent over the past few decades, impacting nutrient dynamics, ocean temperature fluxes and the biological communities present in the ocean. Marine organic matter is a complex mixture of...

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Main Authors: Stevenson MA, Abbott GD
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:unknown
Published: Elsevier BV 2019
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprint.ncl.ac.uk/fulltext.aspx?url=255719/9C451FAB-7CDA-4F50-B4F6-F45C7C7D34B2.pdf&pub_id=255719
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spelling ftunivnewcastle:oai:eprint.ncl.ac.uk:255719 2023-05-15T14:58:05+02:00 Exploring the composition of macromolecular organic matter in Arctic Ocean sediments under a changing sea ice gradient Stevenson MA Abbott GD 2019 application/pdf https://eprint.ncl.ac.uk/fulltext.aspx?url=255719/9C451FAB-7CDA-4F50-B4F6-F45C7C7D34B2.pdf&pub_id=255719 unknown Elsevier BV Journal of Analytical and Applied Pyrolysis, 2019 Article 2019 ftunivnewcastle 2020-06-11T23:46:03Z © 2019 Elsevier B.V. Arctic sea ice has been affected by climate change, leading to reductions in summer sea ice extent over the past few decades, impacting nutrient dynamics, ocean temperature fluxes and the biological communities present in the ocean. Marine organic matter is a complex mixture of differentially degraded terrestrial and marine organisms from a range of sources and time periods. In this study pyrolysis-gas chromatography-mass spectrometry (Py-GC–MS) has been used to quantify the solvent-insoluble component of marine organic matter in surface sediments to gain a more holistic understanding of the macromolecular composition at five stations along a south to north transect in the Arctic Barents Sea, east of Svalbard (depths 288–334 m.b.s.l). Two methods were compared to identify the effectiveness of rapid screening, in contrast to grouping similar pyrolysis products. There were changes in macromolecular composition of marine surface sediments across the S-N transect using both methods, highlighting the varying benthic and pelagic communities north of the Polar Front and across the variable sea ice margin, corresponding to differing biological communities (e.g. fish, phytoplankton, ice algae, zooplankton). All five stations across the changing sea ice transect were interpreted as having primarily marine surface sediment macromolecular signatures, given their locations far from major terrestrial inputs and the more subtle changes when compared with previous investigations on the East Siberian Artic shelf. Fluctuations in macromolecular compositions across the transect included increasing N-containing compounds (including pyridines) and n-alkene/n-alkane doublet pyrolysis products from sediments collected in stations with the greatest average ice cover. If the future position of the Polar Front moves northwards then deposition of labile organic matter which appears to be efficiently processed will move further north, meaning greater deposition of organic carbon under areas of open ocean. Future research needs to understand how this OC will be buried and if it is regionally significant, given anticipated weakening stratification and a more Atlantic influenced northern Barents Sea. Article in Journal/Newspaper Arctic Arctic Ocean Barents Sea Climate change ice algae Phytoplankton Sea ice Svalbard Zooplankton Newcastle University Library ePrints Service Arctic Arctic Ocean Barents Sea Svalbard
institution Open Polar
collection Newcastle University Library ePrints Service
op_collection_id ftunivnewcastle
language unknown
description © 2019 Elsevier B.V. Arctic sea ice has been affected by climate change, leading to reductions in summer sea ice extent over the past few decades, impacting nutrient dynamics, ocean temperature fluxes and the biological communities present in the ocean. Marine organic matter is a complex mixture of differentially degraded terrestrial and marine organisms from a range of sources and time periods. In this study pyrolysis-gas chromatography-mass spectrometry (Py-GC–MS) has been used to quantify the solvent-insoluble component of marine organic matter in surface sediments to gain a more holistic understanding of the macromolecular composition at five stations along a south to north transect in the Arctic Barents Sea, east of Svalbard (depths 288–334 m.b.s.l). Two methods were compared to identify the effectiveness of rapid screening, in contrast to grouping similar pyrolysis products. There were changes in macromolecular composition of marine surface sediments across the S-N transect using both methods, highlighting the varying benthic and pelagic communities north of the Polar Front and across the variable sea ice margin, corresponding to differing biological communities (e.g. fish, phytoplankton, ice algae, zooplankton). All five stations across the changing sea ice transect were interpreted as having primarily marine surface sediment macromolecular signatures, given their locations far from major terrestrial inputs and the more subtle changes when compared with previous investigations on the East Siberian Artic shelf. Fluctuations in macromolecular compositions across the transect included increasing N-containing compounds (including pyridines) and n-alkene/n-alkane doublet pyrolysis products from sediments collected in stations with the greatest average ice cover. If the future position of the Polar Front moves northwards then deposition of labile organic matter which appears to be efficiently processed will move further north, meaning greater deposition of organic carbon under areas of open ocean. Future research needs to understand how this OC will be buried and if it is regionally significant, given anticipated weakening stratification and a more Atlantic influenced northern Barents Sea.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Stevenson MA
Abbott GD
spellingShingle Stevenson MA
Abbott GD
Exploring the composition of macromolecular organic matter in Arctic Ocean sediments under a changing sea ice gradient
author_facet Stevenson MA
Abbott GD
author_sort Stevenson MA
title Exploring the composition of macromolecular organic matter in Arctic Ocean sediments under a changing sea ice gradient
title_short Exploring the composition of macromolecular organic matter in Arctic Ocean sediments under a changing sea ice gradient
title_full Exploring the composition of macromolecular organic matter in Arctic Ocean sediments under a changing sea ice gradient
title_fullStr Exploring the composition of macromolecular organic matter in Arctic Ocean sediments under a changing sea ice gradient
title_full_unstemmed Exploring the composition of macromolecular organic matter in Arctic Ocean sediments under a changing sea ice gradient
title_sort exploring the composition of macromolecular organic matter in arctic ocean sediments under a changing sea ice gradient
publisher Elsevier BV
publishDate 2019
url https://eprint.ncl.ac.uk/fulltext.aspx?url=255719/9C451FAB-7CDA-4F50-B4F6-F45C7C7D34B2.pdf&pub_id=255719
geographic Arctic
Arctic Ocean
Barents Sea
Svalbard
geographic_facet Arctic
Arctic Ocean
Barents Sea
Svalbard
genre Arctic
Arctic Ocean
Barents Sea
Climate change
ice algae
Phytoplankton
Sea ice
Svalbard
Zooplankton
genre_facet Arctic
Arctic Ocean
Barents Sea
Climate change
ice algae
Phytoplankton
Sea ice
Svalbard
Zooplankton
op_source Journal of Analytical and Applied Pyrolysis, 2019
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