Abstract
A one-dimensional quasi-Eulerian model, describing the biological and chemical interactions of autotrophic and heterotrophic plankton populations within the upper 100 m of the water column, was used to explain the relative impact of iron fertilization from Saharan dust on phosphorus cycling by the cyanobacterium, Trichodesmium spp. We examined the Caribbean surface waters off the west coast of Barbados using seasonal cases of dust delivery (summer peak) in relation to periods of elevated phosphorus stocks found in episodic pulses of Amazon River water advected past Barbados by the Guiana Current. The additional iron and phosphorus supplied by fluvial sources, available after biological depletion of nitrogen, could alleviate the growth limitation of Trichodesmium far downstream of the river plumes. The model results were compared with measurements made of Trichodesmium stocks 8 km off the west coast of Barbados. Modeled concentrations within the low-salinity Amazon plumes reached ∼7.4 mg chl m −2, as seen at Barbados. In the absence of the low-salinity signal, the Trichodesmium biomass shifted to phosphorus limitation with little response to iron fertilization. This indicates that Trichodesmium stocks may indeed be mainly a function of phosphorus availability within the upper water column. Therefore, the supply of phosphorus from subtropical/tropical rivers, such as the Amazon and Orinoco, limits the potential cyanophyte response, despite adequate atmospheric iron delivery. This alters our view not only of the western North Atlantic nitrogen budget, but potentially several regions downstream of low N:P river systems.
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