Revisiting the CO2 "source" problem in upwelling areas - a comparative study on eddy upwellings in the South China Sea

MOST 973 program [2013CB955700]; NSFC projects [91028001, 41121091, 41176095, 41023007]; SOA project [GASI-03-01-02-05] The causes for a productive upwelling region to be a source of CO2 are usually referred to the excess CO2 supplied via upwelling of high dissolved inorganic carbon (DIC) from deep...

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Main Authors: Jiao, N., Zhang, Y., Zhou, K., Li, Q., Dai, M., Liu, J., Guo, J., Huang, B., 焦念志, 张瑶
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: COPERNICUS GESELLSCHAFT MBH 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:http://dspace.xmu.edu.cn/handle/2288/88181
id ftxiamenuniv:oai:dspace.xmu.edu.cn:2288/88181
record_format openpolar
spelling ftxiamenuniv:oai:dspace.xmu.edu.cn:2288/88181 2023-05-15T15:12:52+02:00 Revisiting the CO2 "source" problem in upwelling areas - a comparative study on eddy upwellings in the South China Sea Jiao, N. Zhang, Y. Zhou, K. Li, Q. Dai, M. Liu, J. Guo, J. Huang, B. 焦念志 张瑶 2014 http://dspace.xmu.edu.cn/handle/2288/88181 en_US eng COPERNICUS GESELLSCHAFT MBH BIOGEOSCIENCES, 2014,11(9):2465-2475 WOS:000337946400003 http://dspace.xmu.edu.cn/handle/2288/88181 http://dx.doi.org/10.5194/bg-11-2465-2014 PARTICULATE ORGANIC-CARBON PERFORMANCE LIQUID-CHROMATOGRAPHY SMALL-VOLUME TECHNIQUE SUB-ARCTIC PACIFIC SARGASSO SEA MESOSCALE EDDIES UPPER OCEAN PLANKTONIC COMMUNITY DETERMINING TH-234 WATER-COLUMN Article 2014 ftxiamenuniv 2020-07-21T11:42:44Z MOST 973 program [2013CB955700]; NSFC projects [91028001, 41121091, 41176095, 41023007]; SOA project [GASI-03-01-02-05] The causes for a productive upwelling region to be a source of CO2 are usually referred to the excess CO2 supplied via upwelling of high dissolved inorganic carbon (DIC) from deep water. Furthermore, we hypothesize that microbial activity plays a significant role on top of that. To test this hypothesis, multiple biogeochemical parameters were investigated at two cyclonic-eddy-induced upwelling sites, CE1 and CE2, in the western South China Sea. The data showed that upwelling can exert significant influences on biological activities in the euphotic zone and can also impact on particulate organic carbon (POC) export flux depending on upwelling conditions, such as the magnitude, timing, and duration of nutrient input and consequent microbial activities. At CE2, the increase of phytoplankton biomass caused by the upwelled nutrients resulted in increase of POC export flux compared to non-eddy reference sites, while at CE1 the microbial respiration of organic carbon stimulated by the upwelled nutrients significantly contributed to the attenuation of POC export flux. These results suggest that on top of upwelled DIC, microbial activities stimulated by upwelled nutrients and labile organic carbon produced by phytoplankton can play a critical role for an upwelling area to be outgassing or uptaking CO2. We point out that even though an upwelling region is outgassing CO2, carbon sequestration still takes place through the POC-based biological pump as well as the refractory dissolved organic carbon (RDOC)-based microbial carbon pump. Article in Journal/Newspaper Arctic Phytoplankton Xiamen University Institutional Repository Arctic Pacific
institution Open Polar
collection Xiamen University Institutional Repository
op_collection_id ftxiamenuniv
language English
topic PARTICULATE ORGANIC-CARBON
PERFORMANCE LIQUID-CHROMATOGRAPHY
SMALL-VOLUME TECHNIQUE
SUB-ARCTIC PACIFIC
SARGASSO SEA
MESOSCALE EDDIES
UPPER OCEAN
PLANKTONIC COMMUNITY
DETERMINING TH-234
WATER-COLUMN
spellingShingle PARTICULATE ORGANIC-CARBON
PERFORMANCE LIQUID-CHROMATOGRAPHY
SMALL-VOLUME TECHNIQUE
SUB-ARCTIC PACIFIC
SARGASSO SEA
MESOSCALE EDDIES
UPPER OCEAN
PLANKTONIC COMMUNITY
DETERMINING TH-234
WATER-COLUMN
Jiao, N.
Zhang, Y.
Zhou, K.
Li, Q.
Dai, M.
Liu, J.
Guo, J.
Huang, B.
焦念志
张瑶
Revisiting the CO2 "source" problem in upwelling areas - a comparative study on eddy upwellings in the South China Sea
topic_facet PARTICULATE ORGANIC-CARBON
PERFORMANCE LIQUID-CHROMATOGRAPHY
SMALL-VOLUME TECHNIQUE
SUB-ARCTIC PACIFIC
SARGASSO SEA
MESOSCALE EDDIES
UPPER OCEAN
PLANKTONIC COMMUNITY
DETERMINING TH-234
WATER-COLUMN
description MOST 973 program [2013CB955700]; NSFC projects [91028001, 41121091, 41176095, 41023007]; SOA project [GASI-03-01-02-05] The causes for a productive upwelling region to be a source of CO2 are usually referred to the excess CO2 supplied via upwelling of high dissolved inorganic carbon (DIC) from deep water. Furthermore, we hypothesize that microbial activity plays a significant role on top of that. To test this hypothesis, multiple biogeochemical parameters were investigated at two cyclonic-eddy-induced upwelling sites, CE1 and CE2, in the western South China Sea. The data showed that upwelling can exert significant influences on biological activities in the euphotic zone and can also impact on particulate organic carbon (POC) export flux depending on upwelling conditions, such as the magnitude, timing, and duration of nutrient input and consequent microbial activities. At CE2, the increase of phytoplankton biomass caused by the upwelled nutrients resulted in increase of POC export flux compared to non-eddy reference sites, while at CE1 the microbial respiration of organic carbon stimulated by the upwelled nutrients significantly contributed to the attenuation of POC export flux. These results suggest that on top of upwelled DIC, microbial activities stimulated by upwelled nutrients and labile organic carbon produced by phytoplankton can play a critical role for an upwelling area to be outgassing or uptaking CO2. We point out that even though an upwelling region is outgassing CO2, carbon sequestration still takes place through the POC-based biological pump as well as the refractory dissolved organic carbon (RDOC)-based microbial carbon pump.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Jiao, N.
Zhang, Y.
Zhou, K.
Li, Q.
Dai, M.
Liu, J.
Guo, J.
Huang, B.
焦念志
张瑶
author_facet Jiao, N.
Zhang, Y.
Zhou, K.
Li, Q.
Dai, M.
Liu, J.
Guo, J.
Huang, B.
焦念志
张瑶
author_sort Jiao, N.
title Revisiting the CO2 "source" problem in upwelling areas - a comparative study on eddy upwellings in the South China Sea
title_short Revisiting the CO2 "source" problem in upwelling areas - a comparative study on eddy upwellings in the South China Sea
title_full Revisiting the CO2 "source" problem in upwelling areas - a comparative study on eddy upwellings in the South China Sea
title_fullStr Revisiting the CO2 "source" problem in upwelling areas - a comparative study on eddy upwellings in the South China Sea
title_full_unstemmed Revisiting the CO2 "source" problem in upwelling areas - a comparative study on eddy upwellings in the South China Sea
title_sort revisiting the co2 "source" problem in upwelling areas - a comparative study on eddy upwellings in the south china sea
publisher COPERNICUS GESELLSCHAFT MBH
publishDate 2014
url http://dspace.xmu.edu.cn/handle/2288/88181
geographic Arctic
Pacific
geographic_facet Arctic
Pacific
genre Arctic
Phytoplankton
genre_facet Arctic
Phytoplankton
op_source http://dx.doi.org/10.5194/bg-11-2465-2014
op_relation BIOGEOSCIENCES, 2014,11(9):2465-2475
WOS:000337946400003
http://dspace.xmu.edu.cn/handle/2288/88181
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