The Agulhas Current Transports Signals of Local and Remote Indian Ocean Nitrogen Cycling

Author:

Marshall Tanya A.1ORCID,Sigman Daniel M.2ORCID,Beal Lisa M.3ORCID,Foreman Alan4ORCID,Martínez‐García Alfredo4ORCID,Blain Stéphane5ORCID,Campbell Ethan6ORCID,Fripiat François7ORCID,Granger Robyn1ORCID,Harris Eesaa1,Haug Gerald H.3,Marconi Dario2ORCID,Oleynik Sergey2ORCID,Rafter Patrick A.8ORCID,Roman Raymond1ORCID,Sinyanya Kolisa1,Smart Sandi M.19ORCID,Fawcett Sarah E.110ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Oceanography University of Cape Town Cape Town South Africa

2. Department of Geosciences Princeton University Princeton NJ USA

3. Rosenstiel School of Marine and Atmospheric Science University of Miami Miami FL USA

4. Department of Climate Geochemistry Max Planck Institute for Chemistry Mainz Germany

5. Laboratoire d’Océanographie Microbienne Sorbonne Université Banyuls sur mer France

6. School of Oceanography University of Washington Seattle WA USA

7. Department of Geosciences, Environment and Society Université Libre de Bruxelles Brussels Belgium

8. Department of Earth System Science University of California Irvine CA USA

9. Department of Geological Sciences University of Alabama Tuscaloosa AL USA

10. Marine and Antarctic Research Centre for Innovation and Sustainability and (MARIS) University of Cape Town Western Cape South Africa

Abstract

AbstractThe greater Agulhas Current region is an important component of the climate system, yet its influence on carbon and nutrient cycling is poorly understood. Here, we use nitrate isotopes (δ15N, δ18O, Δ(15–18) = δ15N–δ18O) to trace regional water mass circulation and investigate nitrogen cycling in the Agulhas Current and adjacent recirculating waters. The deep and intermediate waters record processes occurring remotely, including partial nitrate assimilation in the Southern Ocean and denitrification in the Arabian Sea. In the thermocline and surface, tropically sourced waters are biogeochemically distinct from adjacent subtropically sourced waters, confirming inhibited lateral mixing across the current core. (Sub)tropical thermocline nitrate δ15N is lower (4.9–5.8‰) than the sub‐thermocline source, Subantarctic Mode Water (6.9‰); we attribute this difference to local N2 fixation. Using a one‐box model to simulate the newly fixed nitrate flux, we estimate a local N2 fixation rate of 7–25 Tg N.a−1, with the upper limit likely biased high. In the mixed layer, nitrate δ15N and δ18O rise in unison, indicating that phytoplankton nitrate assimilation dominates in surface waters, with nitrification restricted to deeper waters. Because nitrate assimilation and nitrification are vertically decoupled, the rate of nitrate assimilation plus N2 fixation can be used to approximate carbon export. Thermocline and mixed‐layer nitrate Δ(15–18) is low, due to both N2 fixation and coupled partial nitrate assimilation and nitrification. Similarly low‐Δ(15–18) nitrate in Agulhas rings indicates leakage of low‐δ15N nitrogen into the South Atlantic, which should be recorded in the organic matter sinking to the seafloor, providing a potential tracer of past Agulhas leakage.

Funder

National Research Foundation

Publisher

American Geophysical Union (AGU)

Subject

Earth and Planetary Sciences (miscellaneous),Space and Planetary Science,Geochemistry and Petrology,Geophysics,Oceanography

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