The Size-Reactivity Continuum of Major Bioelements in the Ocean

Author:

Benner Ronald1,Amon Rainer M.W.2

Affiliation:

1. Department of Biological Sciences and Marine Science Program, University of South Carolina, Columbia, South Carolina 29208;

2. Department of Marine Sciences, Texas A&M University at Galveston, Galveston, Texas 77553;

Abstract

Most of the carbon fixed in primary production is rapidly cycled and remin-eralized, leaving behind various forms of organic carbon that contribute to a vast reservoir of nonliving organic matter in seawater. Most of this carbon resides in dissolved molecules of varying bioavailability and reactivity, and aspects of the cycling of this carbon remain an enigma. The size-reactivity continuum model provides a conceptual framework for understanding the mechanisms governing the formation and mineralization of this carbon. In the seawater bioassay experiments that served as the original basis for this model, investigators observed that larger size classes of organic matter were more bioavailable and more rapidly remineralized by microbes than were smaller size classes. Studies of the chemical composition and radiocarbon content of marine organic matter have further indicated that the complexity and age of organic matter increase with decreasing molecular size. Biodegradation processes appear to shape the size distribution of organic matter and the nature of the small dissolved molecules that persist in the ocean.

Publisher

Annual Reviews

Subject

Oceanography

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