Biodiversity and Stoichiometric Plasticity Increase Pico‐Phytoplankton Contributions to Marine Net Primary Productivity and the Biological Pump

Author:

Letscher Robert T.12ORCID,Moore J. Keith3,Martiny Adam C.34ORCID,Lomas Michael W.5ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Ocean Process Analysis Laboratory University of New Hampshire Durham NH USA

2. Earth Sciences University of New Hampshire Durham NH USA

3. Earth System Science University of California Irvine CA USA

4. Ecology and Evolutionary Biology University of California Irvine CA USA

5. Bigelow Laboratory for Ocean Sciences East Boothbay ME USA

Abstract

AbstractEarth System Models generally predict increasing upper ocean stratification from 21st century warming, which will cause a decrease in the vertical nutrient flux forcing declines in marine net primary productivity (NPP) and carbon export. Recent advances in quantifying marine ecosystem carbon to nutrient stoichiometry have identified large latitudinal and biome variability, with low‐latitude oligotrophic systems harboring pico‐sized phytoplankton exhibiting large phosphorus to carbon cellular plasticity. The climate forced changes in nutrient flux stoichiometry and phytoplankton community composition are thus likely to alter the ocean's biogeochemical response and feedback with the carbon‐climate system. We have added three pico‐phytoplankton functional types within the Biogeochemical Elemental Cycling component of the Community Earth System Model while incorporating variable cellular phosphorus to carbon stoichiometry for all represented phytoplankton types. The model simulates Prochlorococcus and Synechococcus populations that dominate the productivity and sinking carbon export of the tropical and subtropical ocean, and pico‐eukaryote populations that contribute significantly to productivity and export within the subtropical to mid‐latitude transition zone, with the western subtropical regions of each basin supporting the most P‐poor stoichiometries. Subtropical gyre recirculation regions along the poleward flanks of surface western boundary currents are identified as regional hotspots of enhanced carbon export exhibiting C‐rich/P‐poor stoichiometry, preferentially inhabited by pico‐eukaryotes and diatoms. Collectively, pico‐phytoplankton contribute ∼58% of global NPP and ∼46% of global particulate organic carbon export below 100 m through direct and ecosystem processing pathways. Biodiversity and cellular nutrient plasticity in marine pico‐phytoplankton combine to increase their contributions to ocean productivity and the biological carbon pump.

Funder

Office of Science

Publisher

American Geophysical Union (AGU)

Subject

Atmospheric Science,General Environmental Science,Environmental Chemistry,Global and Planetary Change

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