The composition and distribution of semi-labile dissolved organic matter across the southwest Pacific
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Published:2019-01-15
Issue:1
Volume:16
Page:105-116
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ISSN:1726-4189
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Container-title:Biogeosciences
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language:en
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Short-container-title:Biogeosciences
Author:
Panagiotopoulos ChristosORCID, Pujo-Pay Mireille, Benavides MarORCID, Van Wambeke France, Sempéré RichardORCID
Abstract
Abstract. The distribution and dynamics of dissolved organic carbon (DOC) and dissolved
combined neutral sugars (DCNS) were studied across an increasing oligotrophic
gradient (18 to 22∘ S latitude) in the tropical South Pacific Ocean,
spanning from the Melanesian Archipelago (MA) area to the western part of the
South Pacific gyre (WGY), in austral summer as a part of the OUTPACE
project. Our results show that DOC and DCNS concentrations exhibited no
statistical differences between the MA and WGY areas (0–200 m:
47–81 µM C for DOC and 0.2-4.2 µM C for DCNS). However,
due to a deepening of the euphotic zone, a deeper penetration of DOC was
noticeable at 150 m of depth at the WGY area. Excess DOC (DOCEX)
was determined as the difference between surface and deep-sea DOC values, and
euphotic zone integrated stocks of both DOC and DOCEX were higher
in the WGY than the MA area. Considering DOCEX as representative
of semi-labile DOC (DOCSL), its residence time was calculated
as the ratio of DOCSL to bacterial carbon demand (BCD). This
residence time was 176±43 days (n=3) in the WGY area, about 3 times
longer than in the MA area (Tr=51±13 days, n=8), suggesting
an accumulation of semi-labile dissolved organic matter (DOM) in the
surface waters of WGY. Average epipelagic (0–200 m) DCNS yields
(DCNS × DOC−1) based on volumetric data were roughly similar
in both areas, accounting for ∼2.8 % of DOC. DCNS exhibited
a longer residence time in WGY (Tr=91±41 days, n=3) than
in MA (Tr=31±10 days, n=8), further suggesting that this DCNS
pool persists longer in the surface waters of the WGY. The accumulation of
DOCEX in the surface waters of WGY is probably due to very
slow bacterial degradation due to nutrient and/or energy limitation of heterotrophic
prokaryotes, indicating that biologically produced DOC can be stored in the
euphotic layer of the South Pacific gyre for a long period.
Publisher
Copernicus GmbH
Subject
Earth-Surface Processes,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics
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