High Biomass Low Export Regimes in the Southern Ocean

This paper investigates ballasting and remineralization controls of carbon sedimentation in the twilight zone (100-1000 m) of the Southern Ocean. Size-fractionated (<1 {micro}m, 1-51 {micro}m, >51 {micro}m) suspended particulate matter was collected by large volume in-situ filtration from the...

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Main Authors: Lam, Phoebe J., Bishop, James K.B.
Other Authors: United States. Office of Coal Utilization, Advanced Conversion, and Gasification.
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory 2006
Subjects:
54
Online Access:https://digital.library.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metadc880389/
id ftunivnotexas:info:ark/67531/metadc880389
record_format openpolar
institution Open Polar
collection University of North Texas: UNT Digital Library
op_collection_id ftunivnotexas
language English
topic Surface Waters
Biomass
Iron Additions
54
Exports
Zooplankton
Ballast Remineralization Poc Twilight Zone Mesopelagic Southernocean Mulvfs Opal Carbonate Phosphorus
Iron
Carbon
Sedimentation Ballast Remineralization Poc Twilight Zone Mesopelagic Southernocean Mulvfs Opal Carbonate Phosphorus
spellingShingle Surface Waters
Biomass
Iron Additions
54
Exports
Zooplankton
Ballast Remineralization Poc Twilight Zone Mesopelagic Southernocean Mulvfs Opal Carbonate Phosphorus
Iron
Carbon
Sedimentation Ballast Remineralization Poc Twilight Zone Mesopelagic Southernocean Mulvfs Opal Carbonate Phosphorus
Lam, Phoebe J.
Bishop, James K.B.
High Biomass Low Export Regimes in the Southern Ocean
topic_facet Surface Waters
Biomass
Iron Additions
54
Exports
Zooplankton
Ballast Remineralization Poc Twilight Zone Mesopelagic Southernocean Mulvfs Opal Carbonate Phosphorus
Iron
Carbon
Sedimentation Ballast Remineralization Poc Twilight Zone Mesopelagic Southernocean Mulvfs Opal Carbonate Phosphorus
description This paper investigates ballasting and remineralization controls of carbon sedimentation in the twilight zone (100-1000 m) of the Southern Ocean. Size-fractionated (<1 {micro}m, 1-51 {micro}m, >51 {micro}m) suspended particulate matter was collected by large volume in-situ filtration from the upper 1000 m in the Subantarctic (55 S, 172 W) and Antarctic (66 S, 172 W) zones of the Southern Ocean during the Southern Ocean Iron Experiment (SOFeX) in January-February 2002. Particles were analyzed for major chemical constituents (POC, P, biogenic Si, CaCO3), and digital and SEM image analyses of particles were used to aid in the interpretation of the chemical profiles. Twilight zone waters at 66 S in the Antarctic had a steeper decrease in POC with depth than at 55 S in the Subantarctic, with lower POC concentrations in all size fractions at 66 S than at 55 S, despite up to an order of magnitude higher POC in surface waters at 66 S. The decay length scale of >51 {micro}m POC was significantly shorter in the upper twilight zone at 66 S ({delta}{sub e}=26 m) compared to 55 S ({delta}{sub e}=81 m). Particles in the carbonate-producing 55 S did not have higher excess densities than particles from the diatom-dominated 66 S, indicating that there was no direct ballast effect that accounted for deeper POC penetration at 55 S. An indirect ballast effect due to differences in particle packaging and porosities cannot be ruled out, however, as aggregate porosities were high ({approx}97%) and variable. Image analyses point to the importance of particle loss rates from zooplankton grazing and remineralization as determining factors for the difference in twilight zone POC concentrations at 55 S and 66 S, with stronger and more focused shallow remineralization at 66 S. At 66 S, an abundance of large (several mm long) fecal pellets from the surface to 150 m, and almost total removal of large aggregates by 200 m, reflected the actions of a single or few zooplankton species capable of grazing diatoms in the euphotic zone, coupled with a more diverse particle feeding zooplankton community immediately below. Surface waters with high biomass levels and high proportion of biomass in the large size fraction were associated with low particle loading at depth, with all indications implying conditions of low export. The 66 S region exhibits this 'High Biomass, Low Export' (HBLE) condition, with very high >51 {micro}m POC concentrations at the surface ({approx}2.1 {micro}M POC), but low concentrations below 200 m (<0.07 {micro}M POC). The 66 S region remained HBLE after iron fertilization. Iron addition at 55 S caused a ten fold increase in >51 {micro}m biomass concentrations in the euphotic zone, bringing surface POC concentrations to levels found at 66 S ({approx}3.8 {micro}M), and a concurrent decrease in POC concentrations below 200 m. The 55 S region, which began with moderate levels of biomass and stronger particle export, transitioned to being HBLE after iron fertilization. We propose that iron addition to already HBLE waters will not cause mass sedimentation events. The stability of an iron-induced HBLE condition is unknown. Better understanding of biological pump processes in non-HBLE Subantarctic waters is needed.
author2 United States. Office of Coal Utilization, Advanced Conversion, and Gasification.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Lam, Phoebe J.
Bishop, James K.B.
author_facet Lam, Phoebe J.
Bishop, James K.B.
author_sort Lam, Phoebe J.
title High Biomass Low Export Regimes in the Southern Ocean
title_short High Biomass Low Export Regimes in the Southern Ocean
title_full High Biomass Low Export Regimes in the Southern Ocean
title_fullStr High Biomass Low Export Regimes in the Southern Ocean
title_full_unstemmed High Biomass Low Export Regimes in the Southern Ocean
title_sort high biomass low export regimes in the southern ocean
publisher Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
publishDate 2006
url https://digital.library.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metadc880389/
geographic Antarctic
Southern Ocean
The Antarctic
geographic_facet Antarctic
Southern Ocean
The Antarctic
genre Antarc*
Antarctic
Southern Ocean
genre_facet Antarc*
Antarctic
Southern Ocean
op_source Deep Sea Research II, 54(5-7), March 24, 2007
op_relation rep-no: LBNL--59452
grantno: DE-AC02-05CH11231
osti: 918810
https://digital.library.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metadc880389/
ark: ark:/67531/metadc880389
_version_ 1766270294372122624
spelling ftunivnotexas:info:ark/67531/metadc880389 2023-05-15T14:00:54+02:00 High Biomass Low Export Regimes in the Southern Ocean Lam, Phoebe J. Bishop, James K.B. United States. Office of Coal Utilization, Advanced Conversion, and Gasification. 2006-01-27 Text https://digital.library.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metadc880389/ English eng Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory rep-no: LBNL--59452 grantno: DE-AC02-05CH11231 osti: 918810 https://digital.library.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metadc880389/ ark: ark:/67531/metadc880389 Deep Sea Research II, 54(5-7), March 24, 2007 Surface Waters Biomass Iron Additions 54 Exports Zooplankton Ballast Remineralization Poc Twilight Zone Mesopelagic Southernocean Mulvfs Opal Carbonate Phosphorus Iron Carbon Sedimentation Ballast Remineralization Poc Twilight Zone Mesopelagic Southernocean Mulvfs Opal Carbonate Phosphorus Article 2006 ftunivnotexas 2021-03-06T23:07:59Z This paper investigates ballasting and remineralization controls of carbon sedimentation in the twilight zone (100-1000 m) of the Southern Ocean. Size-fractionated (<1 {micro}m, 1-51 {micro}m, >51 {micro}m) suspended particulate matter was collected by large volume in-situ filtration from the upper 1000 m in the Subantarctic (55 S, 172 W) and Antarctic (66 S, 172 W) zones of the Southern Ocean during the Southern Ocean Iron Experiment (SOFeX) in January-February 2002. Particles were analyzed for major chemical constituents (POC, P, biogenic Si, CaCO3), and digital and SEM image analyses of particles were used to aid in the interpretation of the chemical profiles. Twilight zone waters at 66 S in the Antarctic had a steeper decrease in POC with depth than at 55 S in the Subantarctic, with lower POC concentrations in all size fractions at 66 S than at 55 S, despite up to an order of magnitude higher POC in surface waters at 66 S. The decay length scale of >51 {micro}m POC was significantly shorter in the upper twilight zone at 66 S ({delta}{sub e}=26 m) compared to 55 S ({delta}{sub e}=81 m). Particles in the carbonate-producing 55 S did not have higher excess densities than particles from the diatom-dominated 66 S, indicating that there was no direct ballast effect that accounted for deeper POC penetration at 55 S. An indirect ballast effect due to differences in particle packaging and porosities cannot be ruled out, however, as aggregate porosities were high ({approx}97%) and variable. Image analyses point to the importance of particle loss rates from zooplankton grazing and remineralization as determining factors for the difference in twilight zone POC concentrations at 55 S and 66 S, with stronger and more focused shallow remineralization at 66 S. At 66 S, an abundance of large (several mm long) fecal pellets from the surface to 150 m, and almost total removal of large aggregates by 200 m, reflected the actions of a single or few zooplankton species capable of grazing diatoms in the euphotic zone, coupled with a more diverse particle feeding zooplankton community immediately below. Surface waters with high biomass levels and high proportion of biomass in the large size fraction were associated with low particle loading at depth, with all indications implying conditions of low export. The 66 S region exhibits this 'High Biomass, Low Export' (HBLE) condition, with very high >51 {micro}m POC concentrations at the surface ({approx}2.1 {micro}M POC), but low concentrations below 200 m (<0.07 {micro}M POC). The 66 S region remained HBLE after iron fertilization. Iron addition at 55 S caused a ten fold increase in >51 {micro}m biomass concentrations in the euphotic zone, bringing surface POC concentrations to levels found at 66 S ({approx}3.8 {micro}M), and a concurrent decrease in POC concentrations below 200 m. The 55 S region, which began with moderate levels of biomass and stronger particle export, transitioned to being HBLE after iron fertilization. We propose that iron addition to already HBLE waters will not cause mass sedimentation events. The stability of an iron-induced HBLE condition is unknown. Better understanding of biological pump processes in non-HBLE Subantarctic waters is needed. Article in Journal/Newspaper Antarc* Antarctic Southern Ocean University of North Texas: UNT Digital Library Antarctic Southern Ocean The Antarctic