A tale of two nutrients: how nitrogen and phosphorus differentially control marine biomass production and stoichiometry

Author:

Seelen Emily1ORCID,Gleich Samantha1,Kumler William2,Anderson Hanna3,Bian Xiaopeng1ORCID,Björkman Karin,Caron David1,Dyhrman Sonya4ORCID,Ferron Sara5ORCID,Finkel Zoe6,Haley Sheean3,Hu Ying-Yu6ORCID,Ingalls Anitra2ORCID,Irwin Andrew6ORCID,Karl David7ORCID,Kong Kyeong Pil1,Lowenstein Daniel8,Estrada Andrés Salazar9,Townsend Emily1,Tracey John10,Turk-Kubo Kendra11ORCID,Mooy Benjamin Van12ORCID,John Seth1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. University of Southern California

2. University of Washington

3. Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory, Columbia University

4. Columbia University

5. University of Hawaii

6. Dalhousie University

7. University of Hawaii at Manoa

8. Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution

9. University of Hawai'i at Manoa

10. Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory

11. University of California, Santa Cruz

12. Woods Hole Oceanographic Inst.

Abstract

Abstract

The efficacy of the marine biological carbon pump is tied to new production of phytoplankton which require nitrogen and phosphorus to grow. Globally, nitrate and phosphate are delivered from deep to surface waters and are incorporated into biomass at molar ratios near 16:1, the N:P “Redfield ratio.” Latitudinally, surface particulate N:P ratios vary, often attributed to two mechanisms: variations in microbial community composition and physiological acclimation. How these mechanisms influence plankton growth and stoichiometry impacts the marine carbon cycle, yet remain uncertain. We explore these mechanisms using a mesocosm experiment with a natural, oligotrophic community amended with N and/or P. We show that the N supply rate impacted the particulate N:P ratio by altering the overall community composition, whereas low P availability elevated the community N:P ratios via physiological acclimation. Despite N:P flexibility, the particulate C:N ratio remained within a tight range. Extrapolated to the global surface ocean, these results imply that increased N supply to surface waters through events like N2 fixation and dust may enhance overall C fixation while depleting surface P to levels traditionally considered limiting, but through cellular acclimation, can maintain the efficiency of the biological carbon pump.

Publisher

Research Square Platform LLC

Reference105 articles.

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4. Galbraith ED, Martiny AC (2015) A simple nutrient-dependence mechanism for predicting the stoichiometry of marine ecosystems. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. 112, 8199–8204

5. Nutrient ratios in marine particulate organic matter are predicted by the population structure of well-adapted phytoplankton;Sharoni S;Sci Adv,2020

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