Abstract
Abstract. The oceanic phosphorus cycle describes how phosphorus
moves through the ocean, accumulates with the sediments on the seafloor, and
participates in biogeochemical reactions. We propose a new two-reservoir
scenario of the glacial–interglacial phosphorus cycle. It relies on
diagenesis in methane hydrate-bearing sediments to mobilize sedimentary
phosphorus and transfer it to the oceanic reservoir during times when
falling sea level lowers the hydrostatic pressure on the seafloor and
destabilizes methane hydrates. The stock of solid phase phosphorus
mobilizable by this process is of the same order of magnitude as the
dissolved phosphate inventory of the current oceanic reservoir. The
potential additional flux of phosphate during the glacial period is of the
same order of magnitude as pre-agricultural, riverine dissolved phosphate
fluxes to the ocean. Throughout the cycle, primary production assimilates
phosphorus and inorganic carbon into biomass, which, upon settling and
burial, returns phosphorus to the sedimentary reservoir. Primary production
also lowers the partial pressure of CO2 in the surface ocean,
potentially drawing down CO2 from the atmosphere. Concurrent with this
slow “biological pump”, but operating in the opposite direction, a “physical
pump” brings metabolic CO2-enriched waters from deep-ocean basins to
the upper ocean. The two pumps compete, but the direction of the CO2 flux at the air–sea interface depends on the nutrient content of the deep
waters. Because of the transfer of reactive phosphorus to the sedimentary
reservoir throughout a glaciation cycle, low-phosphorus and high-CO2 deep
waters reign at the beginning of a deglaciation, resulting in rapid transfer
of CO2 to the atmosphere. The new scenario provides another element to
the suite of processes that may have contributed to the rapid
glacial–interglacial climate transitions documented in paleo-records.
Funder
Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada
Subject
Earth-Surface Processes,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics
Cited by
8 articles.
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