Multiple drivers of production and particle export in the western tropical North Atlantic

To assess the impacts of Amazon River discharge, Saharan dust deposition, N2-fixation and mixed-layer deepening on the biological carbon pump, sediment traps were moored from October 2012 to November 2013 at two sites in the western tropical North Atlantic (49°W,12°N/57°W,12°N). Particle exports int...

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Main Authors: Korte, Laura F., Brummer, Geert Jan A., van der Does, Michèlle, Guerreiro, Catarina V., Mienis, Furu, Munday, Chris I., Ponsoni, Leandro, Schouten, Stefan, Stuut, Jan Berend W.
Other Authors: non-UU output of UU-AW members
Language:English
Published: 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:https://dspace.library.uu.nl/handle/1874/410920
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spelling ftunivutrecht:oai:dspace.library.uu.nl:1874/410920 2023-12-10T09:51:16+01:00 Multiple drivers of production and particle export in the western tropical North Atlantic Korte, Laura F. Brummer, Geert Jan A. van der Does, Michèlle Guerreiro, Catarina V. Mienis, Furu Munday, Chris I. Ponsoni, Leandro Schouten, Stefan Stuut, Jan Berend W. non-UU output of UU-AW members 2020-09 application/pdf https://dspace.library.uu.nl/handle/1874/410920 eng eng https://dspace.library.uu.nl/handle/1874/410920 info:eu-repo/semantics/OpenAccess 2020 ftunivutrecht 2023-11-15T23:15:14Z To assess the impacts of Amazon River discharge, Saharan dust deposition, N2-fixation and mixed-layer deepening on the biological carbon pump, sediment traps were moored from October 2012 to November 2013 at two sites in the western tropical North Atlantic (49°W,12°N/57°W,12°N). Particle exports interpreted along with satellite- and Argo-float data show peak fluxes in biogenic silica (31 mg m−2 d−1) and organic carbon (25 mg m−2 d−1) during the fall of 2013 that were ten to five times higher than any time earlier during the year. These high export fluxes occurred in tandem with high surface chlorophyll a concentrations associated with the dispersal of the Amazon River plume, following retroflection into the North-Atlantic-Counter-Current. High fucoxanthin fluxes (' 80 μg m−2 d−1) and low δ15N-values (−0.6‰) suggest a large contribution by marine diatom-diazotrophic-associations, possibly enhanced by wet Saharan dust deposition. During summer, the Amazon River plume resulted in high mass fluxes at 57°W that were enriched in biogenic silica but weakly influenced by diazotrophic-associations compared to the fall event at 49°W. High carbonate-carbon fluxes (17 mg m−2 d−1) dominated a second single event at 49°W during spring that was likely triggered by mixed-layer deepening. Rain-ratios of BSi/Ccarb amounted to 1.7 when associated with high export fluxes linked to the Amazon River plume. Compared to an annual average of 0.3, this indicates a more efficient uptake of CO2 via the biological pump compared to when the plume was absent, hence supporting earlier observations that the Amazon River plume is important for ocean CO2 sequestration. Other/Unknown Material North Atlantic Utrecht University Repository
institution Open Polar
collection Utrecht University Repository
op_collection_id ftunivutrecht
language English
description To assess the impacts of Amazon River discharge, Saharan dust deposition, N2-fixation and mixed-layer deepening on the biological carbon pump, sediment traps were moored from October 2012 to November 2013 at two sites in the western tropical North Atlantic (49°W,12°N/57°W,12°N). Particle exports interpreted along with satellite- and Argo-float data show peak fluxes in biogenic silica (31 mg m−2 d−1) and organic carbon (25 mg m−2 d−1) during the fall of 2013 that were ten to five times higher than any time earlier during the year. These high export fluxes occurred in tandem with high surface chlorophyll a concentrations associated with the dispersal of the Amazon River plume, following retroflection into the North-Atlantic-Counter-Current. High fucoxanthin fluxes (' 80 μg m−2 d−1) and low δ15N-values (−0.6‰) suggest a large contribution by marine diatom-diazotrophic-associations, possibly enhanced by wet Saharan dust deposition. During summer, the Amazon River plume resulted in high mass fluxes at 57°W that were enriched in biogenic silica but weakly influenced by diazotrophic-associations compared to the fall event at 49°W. High carbonate-carbon fluxes (17 mg m−2 d−1) dominated a second single event at 49°W during spring that was likely triggered by mixed-layer deepening. Rain-ratios of BSi/Ccarb amounted to 1.7 when associated with high export fluxes linked to the Amazon River plume. Compared to an annual average of 0.3, this indicates a more efficient uptake of CO2 via the biological pump compared to when the plume was absent, hence supporting earlier observations that the Amazon River plume is important for ocean CO2 sequestration.
author2 non-UU output of UU-AW members
author Korte, Laura F.
Brummer, Geert Jan A.
van der Does, Michèlle
Guerreiro, Catarina V.
Mienis, Furu
Munday, Chris I.
Ponsoni, Leandro
Schouten, Stefan
Stuut, Jan Berend W.
spellingShingle Korte, Laura F.
Brummer, Geert Jan A.
van der Does, Michèlle
Guerreiro, Catarina V.
Mienis, Furu
Munday, Chris I.
Ponsoni, Leandro
Schouten, Stefan
Stuut, Jan Berend W.
Multiple drivers of production and particle export in the western tropical North Atlantic
author_facet Korte, Laura F.
Brummer, Geert Jan A.
van der Does, Michèlle
Guerreiro, Catarina V.
Mienis, Furu
Munday, Chris I.
Ponsoni, Leandro
Schouten, Stefan
Stuut, Jan Berend W.
author_sort Korte, Laura F.
title Multiple drivers of production and particle export in the western tropical North Atlantic
title_short Multiple drivers of production and particle export in the western tropical North Atlantic
title_full Multiple drivers of production and particle export in the western tropical North Atlantic
title_fullStr Multiple drivers of production and particle export in the western tropical North Atlantic
title_full_unstemmed Multiple drivers of production and particle export in the western tropical North Atlantic
title_sort multiple drivers of production and particle export in the western tropical north atlantic
publishDate 2020
url https://dspace.library.uu.nl/handle/1874/410920
genre North Atlantic
genre_facet North Atlantic
op_relation https://dspace.library.uu.nl/handle/1874/410920
op_rights info:eu-repo/semantics/OpenAccess
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