Revised microbial and photochemical triple-oxygen isotope effects improve marine gross oxygen production estimates

Author:

Sutherland Kevin M1ORCID,Johnston David T1ORCID,Hemingway Jordon D2ORCID,Wankel Scott D3ORCID,Ward Collin P3ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Earth and Planetary Sciences, Harvard University , Cambridge, MA 02138 , USA

2. ETH Zürich, Geological Institute, Department of Earth Sciences , Zürich 8092 , Switzerland

3. Department of Marine Chemistry and Geochemistry, Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution , Woods Hole, MA 02543 , USA

Abstract

Abstract The biogeochemical fluxes that cycle oxygen (O2) play a critical role in regulating Earth’s climate and habitability. Triple-oxygen isotope (TOI) compositions of marine dissolved O2 are considered a robust tool for tracing oxygen cycling and quantifying gross photosynthetic O2 production. This method assumes that photosynthesis, microbial respiration, and gas exchange with the atmosphere are the primary influences on dissolved O2 content, and that they have predictable, fixed isotope effects. Despite its widespread use, there are major elements of this approach that remain uncharacterized, including the TOI dynamics of respiration by marine heterotrophic bacteria and abiotic O2 sinks such as the photochemical oxidation of dissolved organic carbon (DOC). Here, we report the TOI fractionation for O2 utilization by two model marine heterotrophs and by abiotic photo-oxidation of representative terrestrial and coastal marine DOC. We demonstrate that TOI slopes associated with these processes span a significant range of the mass-dependent domain (λ = 0.499 to 0.521). A sensitivity analysis reveals that even under moderate productivity and photo-oxidation scenarios, true gross oxygen production may deviate from previous estimates by more than 20% in either direction. By considering a broader suite of oxygen cycle reactions, our findings challenge current gross oxygen production estimates and highlight several paths forward to better understanding the marine oxygen and carbon cycles.

Funder

National Science Foundation

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

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