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The Oceanic Carbon Cycle: Biological Pump

The Oceanic Carbon Cycle: Biological Pump. Primary producers: who are they? How does the pump work: transport to the bottom Open ocean ecosystems. high diversity: DEEP SEA. Deep-Sea : diverse life forms.

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The Oceanic Carbon Cycle: Biological Pump

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  1. The Oceanic Carbon Cycle:Biological Pump • Primary producers: who are they? • How does the pump work: transport to the bottom • Open ocean ecosystems

  2. high diversity:DEEP SEA

  3. Deep-Sea : diverse life forms • Deep-sea thought to be without life (‘azoic’) until 19th century deep-sea exploration expeditions • ‘Erebus’and‘Terror’, 1839-1843, James Ross Clark • ‘Lightning’ and ‘Porcupine’, 1868-1869, Wyville Thompson • ‘Challenger’, 1872-1876, Wyville Thompson, J. W. Murray (Foraminifera:H .B. Brady, 1884)

  4. SURFACE OCEAN PRIMARY PRODUCTIVITY Satellite data (CZCS, SeaWIFS) High productivity: input of nutrients (N, P) from land Seasonality

  5. Oceanic spring bloom (high-mid latitudes) • Winter: light limitation (insolation, storms mix phytoplankton below photic zone) • Nutrients not (fully) used; accumulate • Spring: more light, warming causes stratification, keeps plankton within photic zone • Bloom (until nutrients used up, zooplankton eats phytoplankton)

  6. ‘PROTISTS’: EUKARYOTES (unicellular) LIFE ON EARTH EUKARYOTES(multicellular):FungiAnimaliaPlantae Molecular phylogenies: Protein sequences Small subunit RNA PROKARYOTES

  7. Oceanic primary producers: • Prokaryotes (unicellular, ‘simple’ cell, asexual reproduction; 0.6 mm) - cyanobacteria Prochlorococcus, Synechococcus): up to ~2/3 of primary productivity in the oceans • Eukaryotes (complex cell - nucleus - sexual and asexual reproduction; tens of mm) • Bacillariophyceae - Opaline Silica skeleton: Diatoms • Haptophyceaea • Calcium-carbonate skeleton: Calcareous Nannoplankton • No skeleton: Phaeocystis • Dinophyceae - organic -walled cysts: Dinoflagellates

  8. COCCOLITHOPHORES CALCAREOUS NANNOPLANKTON • Polysaccharide gels (transparent exopolymer particles) (Haptophyte Algae) Diameter ~20-30 mm

  9. Planktonic foraminifer

  10. Prymnesiophytes (Haptophytes) -Phaeocystis • Polysaccharide gels (transparent exopolymer particles)

  11. Transparent Exopolymer Particles • Phaeocystis blooms at high latitudes (survive in sea ice) • ~10% of annual global marine primary productivity • Much of this in form of gels - major part of dissolved organic carbon in oceans • Secrete dimethylsulfide - add sulfur to atmosphere

  12. Diatoms • Today up to 20-40% net primary production, ~ 50% organic carbon exported

  13. Diatoms • Rapid delivery of diatoms to sea floor in frontal zones (Kemp et al., 2006) • ‘giant diatoms’ in mats e.g., Fragilariopsis, Thalassiothrix, Rhizosolenia

  14. Dinoflagellates • Dinophyceae

  15. Dinoflagellates: harmful algal blooms (HABs)

  16. Type of primary producers/productivity of oceans: • Open ocean, low productivity (central gyres): prokaryotes, some dinoflagellates • Open ocean, higher productivity: calcareous nannoplankton • Open ocean, highest productivity: diatoms, Phaeocystis • Coastal ocean, high productivity: dinoflagellates, Phaeocystis

  17. Oceanic primary productivity: different dominant producers - ‘fertility’ ANNUAL

  18. Deep-sea environment:cold, dark,high pressure,very little food. Food supplied by surface productivity, miles up: biological pump

  19. How much food reaches the bottom?Not very much (<1 to few % of PP) e.g., Martin et al., 1987; north-east Pacific stations F=1.53(z/100)-0.858 z=depth

  20. Oceanic food chain

  21. Food from surface to bottom:biological pumphow does it work? • Marine snow (~4 mm particle, dead and dying phytoplankton, zooplankton exoskeletons, fecal matter) • 102-103 m/day

  22. Organic matter from surface to bottom:biological pump • Ballasted by • silica (diatoms) • carbonate (foraminifera, nannoplankton) • terrigenous dust • In fecal pellets • Stuck together by polysaccharides (Phaeocystis, diatoms, cyanobacteria, calcareous nannoplankton) • In ‘giant balls of mucus’ - larvacean houses • Carrion falls (‘dead whales’) • Lateral transport (refractory organic matter) Discrepancy between food requirements of faunas and supply in sediment traps: faunas need more than what is delivered

  23. Larvacean ‘houses’ (tunicates)2-3 feet diameter • Tunicates are Chordates (related to us vertebrates - lancelet fish)

  24. We do not understand transport of organic matter to the sea floor in the present ocean, nor importance of prokaryotic productivity • We can not predict the effects of global warming and increased nutrients on carbon cycle in the oceans

  25. Oceanic primary productivity - how limited? Transport to sea floor - how limited? Can we manipulate (carbon sequestration)?

  26. In some regions N and P are NOT limiting • "high-nutrient, low-chlorophyll” (HNLC) regions, e.g. equatorial Pacific • Not enough iron (Fe)

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