Macro-nutrient concentrations in Antarctic pack ice: Overall patterns and overlooked processes

Author:

Fripiat François12,Meiners Klaus M.34,Vancoppenolle Martin5,Papadimitriou Stathys6,Thomas David N.67,Ackley Stephen F.8,Arrigo Kevin R.9,Carnat Gauthier10,Cozzi Stefano11,Delille Bruno12,Dieckmann Gerhard S.13,Dunbar Robert B.9,Fransson Agneta1415,Kattner Gerhard13,Kennedy Hilary6,Lannuzel Delphine16,Munro David R.17,Nomura Daiki18,Rintala Janne-Markus719,Schoemann Véronique10,Stefels Jacqueline20,Steiner Nadja21,Tison Jean-Louis8

Affiliation:

1. Vrije Universiteit Brussel, Analytical, Environmental, and Geo-Chemistry Department, Brussels, BE

2. Max Planck Institute for Chemistry, Mainz, DE

3. Australian Antarctic Division, Department of the Environment and Energy, Kingston, Tasmania, AU

4. University of Tasmania, Antarctic Climate and Ecosystems Cooperative Research Centre, Hobart, Tasmania, AU

5. Sorbonne Universités (UPMC Paris 6), LOCEAN-IPSL, CNRS/IRD/MNHN, Paris, FR

6. Bangor University, School of Ocean Sciences, Menai Bridge, Anglesey, UK

7. Finnish Environment Institute (SYKE), Marine Research Centre, Helsinki, FI

8. University of Texas at San Antonio, Snow and Ice Geophysics Laboratory, Geol. Sciences Dept, San Antonio, Texas, US

9. Stanford University, Department of Earth System Science, Stanford, California, US

10. Université Libre de Bruxelles, Laboratoire de Glaciologie, Brussels, BE

11. CNR-ISMAR, Istituto di Scienze Marine, Trieste, IT

12. Université de Liège, Unité d’Océanographie Chimique, MARE, Liège, BE

13. Alfred Wegener Institute Helmholtz Centre for Polar and Marine Research, Bremerhaven, DE

14. Norwegian Polar Institute, Fram Centre, Tromsø, NO

15. University of Gothenburg, Department of Earth Sciences, Göteborg, SE

16. University of Tasmania, Institute for Marine and Antarctic Studies, Hobart, Tasmania, AU

17. University of Colorado Boulder, Department of Atmospheric and Oceanic Sciences and Institute of Arctic and Alpine Research, Boulder, Colorado, US

18. Faculty of Fisheries Science, Hokkaido University, Hakodate, JP

19. University of Helsinki, Department of Environmental Sciences, Helsinki, FI

20. University of Groningen, Groningen Institute for Evolutionary Life Sciences, Ecophysiology of Plants, Groningen, NL

21. Institute of Ocean Sciences, Department of Fisheries and Ocean Canada, Sidney, British Columbia, CA

Abstract

Antarctic pack ice is inhabited by a diverse and active microbial community reliant on nutrients for growth. Seeking patterns and overlooked processes, we performed a large-scale compilation of macro-nutrient data (hereafter termed nutrients) in Antarctic pack ice (306 ice-cores collected from 19 research cruises). Dissolved inorganic nitrogen and silicic acid concentrations change with time, as expected from a seasonally productive ecosystem. In winter, salinity-normalized nitrate and silicic acid concentrations (C*) in sea ice are close to seawater concentrations (Cw), indicating little or no biological activity. In spring, nitrate and silicic acid concentrations become partially depleted with respect to seawater (C* < Cw), commensurate with the seasonal build-up of ice microalgae promoted by increased insolation. Stronger and earlier nitrate than silicic acid consumption suggests that a significant fraction of the primary productivity in sea ice is sustained by flagellates. By both consuming and producing ammonium and nitrite, the microbial community maintains these nutrients at relatively low concentrations in spring. With the decrease in insolation beginning in late summer, dissolved inorganic nitrogen and silicic acid concentrations increase, indicating imbalance between their production (increasing or unchanged) and consumption (decreasing) in sea ice. Unlike the depleted concentrations of both nitrate and silicic acid from spring to summer, phosphate accumulates in sea ice (C* > Cw). The phosphate excess could be explained by a greater allocation to phosphorus-rich biomolecules during ice algal blooms coupled with convective loss of excess dissolved nitrogen, preferential remineralization of phosphorus, and/or phosphate adsorption onto metal-organic complexes. Ammonium also appears to be efficiently adsorbed onto organic matter, with likely consequences to nitrogen mobility and availability. This dataset supports the view that the sea ice microbial community is highly efficient at processing nutrients but with a dynamic quite different from that in oceanic surface waters calling for focused future investigations.

Publisher

University of California Press

Subject

Atmospheric Science,Geology,Geotechnical Engineering and Engineering Geology,Ecology,Environmental Engineering,Oceanography

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