Biological productivity during sapropel S5 formation in the Eastern Mediterranean Sea: evidence from stable isotopes of nitrogen and carbon

We determined super(15)N/ super(14)N ratios in modern surface and sapropel S5 sediments of the Mediterranean Sea to clarify differences in the nutrient regime associated with sapropel formation. In the modern situation, high delta super(15)N of unused nitrate (15-20ppt) remaining in the surface wate...

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Veröffentlicht in:Geochimica et cosmochimica acta 2001-10, Vol.65 (19), p.3249-3266
Hauptverfasser: Struck, Ulrich, Emeis, Kay-Christian, Voß, Maren, Krom, Michael D., Rau, Greg H.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:We determined super(15)N/ super(14)N ratios in modern surface and sapropel S5 sediments of the Mediterranean Sea to clarify differences in the nutrient regime associated with sapropel formation. In the modern situation, high delta super(15)N of unused nitrate (15-20ppt) remaining in the surface waters during the winter phytoplankton bloom evidences P-limitation of biological production in winter. delta super(15)N of surface sediments decrease towards the east of the basin (5 to >2.5ppt). This is a consequence of either eastward increasing nitrogen fixation during the summer months, or of particulate matter being supplied predominantly by the P-limited winter bloom. Very low (-1-1ppt) delta super(15)N values in sapropel S-5 from four locations require a very light source of nutrient-N assimilated at a minimum of ten times the modern export flux. Because the isochronous records show no spatial gradient in delta super(15)N, we exclude both Ekman-type upwelling and direct riverine discharge as likely sources of nutrients. Our data are consistent with an anti-estuarine thermohaline circulation in the upper 500m during S5 time, allowing for the trapping of nutrients in the eastern basin. The most likely scenario for S5 is that phosphorus release from a relatively shallow redox boundary resulted in an imbalanced supply of N:P (
ISSN:0016-7037
DOI:10.1016/S0016-7037(01)00668-8