Abstract

Abstract. The Subantarctic and Polar Frontal zones (SAZ and PFZ) represent a large portion of the total area of the Southern Ocean and serve as a strong sink for atmospheric CO2. These regions are central to hypotheses linking particle fluxes and climate change, yet multi-year records of modern flux and the organisms that control it are, for obvious reasons, rare. In this study, we examine two sediment trap records of the flux of diatoms and bulk components collected by two bottom-tethered sediment traps deployed at mesopelagic depths (~ 1 km) in the SAZ (2-year record; July 1999–October 2001) and in the PFZ (6-year record; September 1997–February 1998, July 1999–August 2000, November 2002–October 2004 and December 2005–October 2007) along the 140° E meridian. These traps provide a direct measure of transfer below winter mixed layer depths, i.e. at depths where effective sequestration from the atmosphere occurs, in contrast to study of processes in the surface ocean. Total mass fluxes were about twofold higher in the PFZ (24 ± 13 g m−2 yr−1) than in the SAZ (14 ± 2 g m−2 yr−1). Bulk chemical composition of the particle fluxes mirrored the composition of the distinct plankton communities of the surface layer, being dominated by carbonate in the SAZ and by biogenic silica in the PFZ. Particulate organic carbon (POC) export was similar for the annual average at both sites (1.0 ± 0.1 and 0.8 ± 0.4 g m−2 yr−1 for the PFZ and SAZ, respectively), indicating that the particles in the SAZ were relatively POC rich. Seasonality in the particle export was more pronounced in the PFZ. Peak fluxes occurred during summer in the PFZ and during spring in the SAZ. The strong summer pulses in the PFZ are responsible for a large fraction of the variability in carbon sequestration from the atmosphere in this region. The latitudinal variation of the total diatom flux was found to be in line with the biogenic silica export with an annual flux of 31 ± 5.5 × 108 valves m−2 yr−1 at the PFZ compared to 0.5 ± 0.4 × 108 m−2 yr−1 at the SAZ. Fragilariopsis kerguelensis dominated the annual diatom export at both sites (43 % at the SAZ and 59 % in the PFZ). POC fluxes displayed a strong positive correlation with the relative contribution of a group of weakly silicified and bloom-forming species in the PFZ. Several lines of evidence suggests that the development of these species during the growth season facilitates the formation of aggregates and carbon export. Our results confirm previous work suggesting that F. kerguelensis plays a major role in the decoupling of the carbon and silicon cycles in the high-nutrient low-chlorophyll waters of the Southern Ocean.

Highlights

  • The Southern Ocean is a critical component of the Earth’s ocean–climate system and plays a pivotal role in the global biogeochemical cycles of nutrients and carbon

  • This study reports on the chemical and biological composition of material exported at ∼ 1 km depth at two sites representative of two major hydrological regions of the Australian sector of the Southern Ocean, the Subantarctic Zone (SAZ) and Polar Frontal Zone (PFZ)

  • As a result of different algal communities, the composition and magnitude of the sinking particle fluxes was very different between sites, with higher and biogenic silica (BSi)-dominated fluxes in the PFZ versus lower and carbonate-dominated fluxes in the SAZ

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Summary

Introduction

The Southern Ocean is a critical component of the Earth’s ocean–climate system and plays a pivotal role in the global biogeochemical cycles of nutrients and carbon. Dissolution of carbon dioxide in these newly formed waters (i.e. the solubility pump) and the transport of photosynthetically fixed carbon to depth in settling particles (i.e. the biological pump) modulate the extent to which the carbon dioxide is transferred to the atmosphere. The balance between these processes determines the role of the Southern Ocean either as a source or sink of atmospheric CO2 over glacial–interglacial climate cycles (Kohfeld et al, 2005; Anderson et al, 2009; Sigman et al, 2010)

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