Physiological control on carbon isotope fractionation in marine phytoplankton
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Published:2022-07-15
Issue:13
Volume:19
Page:3305-3315
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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:
Brandenburg Karen M., Rost BjörnORCID, Van de Waal Dedmer B., Hoins Mirja, Sluijs AppyORCID
Abstract
Abstract. One of the great challenges in biogeochemical research over the
past half a century has been to quantify and understand the mechanisms
underlying stable carbon isotope fractionation (εp) in
phytoplankton in response to changing CO2 concentrations. This interest is partly grounded in the use of fossil photosynthetic organism
remains as a proxy for past atmospheric CO2 levels. Phytoplankton
organic carbon is depleted in 13C compared to its source because of
kinetic fractionation by the enzyme RubisCO during photosynthetic carbon
fixation, as well as through physiological pathways upstream of RubisCO.
Moreover, other factors such as nutrient limitation, variations in light
regime as well as phytoplankton culturing systems and inorganic carbon
manipulation approaches may confound the influence of aquatic CO2
concentrations [CO2] on εp. Here, based on
experimental data compiled from the literature, we assess which underlying
physiological processes cause the observed differences in εp for various phytoplankton groups in response to C-demand/C-supply, i.e., particulate organic carbon (POC) production / [CO2]) and test potential confounding factors.
Culturing approaches and methods of carbonate chemistry manipulation were
found to best explain the differences in εp between
studies, although day length was an important predictor for εp in haptophytes. Extrapolating results from culturing experiments to
natural environments and for proxy applications therefore require caution,
and it should be carefully considered whether culture methods and
experimental conditions are representative of natural environments.
Funder
H2020 European Research Council
Publisher
Copernicus GmbH
Subject
Earth-Surface Processes,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics
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