Biogeochemical controls on ammonium accumulation in the surface layer of the Southern Ocean
The production and removal of ammonium (NH4+) are essential upper-ocean nitrogen cycle pathways, yet in the Southern Ocean where NH4+ has been observed to accumulate in surface waters, its mixed-layer cycling remains poorly understood. For surface seawater samples collected between Cape Town and the...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Biogeosciences 2022-02, Vol.19 (3), p.715-741 |
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Zusammenfassung: | The production and removal of ammonium (NH4+) are essential upper-ocean
nitrogen cycle pathways, yet in the Southern Ocean where NH4+ has been
observed to accumulate in surface waters, its mixed-layer cycling remains
poorly understood. For surface seawater samples collected between Cape Town
and the Marginal Ice Zone in winter 2017, we found that NH4+ concentrations
were 5-fold higher than is typical for summer and lower north than south
of the Subantarctic Front (0.01–0.26 µM versus 0.19–0.70 µM). Our observations confirm that NH4+ accumulates in the Southern Ocean's
winter mixed layer, particularly in polar waters. NH4+ assimilation rates
were highest near the Polar Front (12.9 ± 0.4 nM d−1) and in
the Subantarctic Zone (10.0 ± 1.5 nM d−1), decreasing towards
the Marginal Ice Zone (3.0 ± 0.8 nM d−1) despite the high
ambient NH4+ concentrations in these southernmost waters, likely due to the
low temperatures and limited light availability. By contrast, rates of NH4+
oxidation were higher south than north of the Polar Front (16.0 ± 0.8
versus 11.1 ± 0.5 nM d−1), perhaps due to the lower-light and
higher-iron conditions characteristic of polar waters. NH4+ concentrations
were also measured along five transects of the Southern Ocean (Subtropical Zone to
Marginal Ice Zone) spanning the 2018/19 annual cycle. These measurements
reveal that mixed-layer NH4+ accumulation south of the Subantarctic Front
derives from sustained heterotrophic NH4+ production in late summer through
winter that, in net, outpaces NH4+ removal by temperature-, light-, and
iron-limited microorganisms. Our observations thus imply that the Southern
Ocean becomes a biological source of CO2 to the atmosphere in autumn
and winter not only because nitrate drawdown is weak but also because the
ambient conditions favour net heterotrophy and NH4+ accumulation. |
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ISSN: | 1726-4189 1726-4170 1726-4189 |
DOI: | 10.5194/bg-19-715-2022 |