Abstract
AbstractAn extensive data set of biogenic silica (BSi) fluxes is presented for the Peruvian oxygen minimum zone (OMZ) at 11°S and 12°S. Each transect extends from the shelf to the upper slope (∼1,000 m) and dissects the permanently anoxic waters between ∼200 and 500 m water depth. BSi burial (2,100 mmol m−2 yr−1) and recycling fluxes (3,300 mmol m−2 yr−1) were highest on the shelf with mean preservation efficiencies (34% ± 15%) that exceed the global mean of 10%–20%. BSi preservation was highest on the inner shelf (up to 56%), decreasing to 7% and 12% under anoxic waters and below the OMZ, respectively. The data suggest that the main control on BSi preservation is the rate at which reactive BSi is transported away from undersaturated surface sediments by burial and bioturbation to the underlying saturated sediment layers where BSi dissolution is thermodynamically and/or kinetically inhibited. BSi burial across the entire Peruvian margin between 3°S to 15°S and down to 1,000 m water depth is estimated to be 0.1–0.2 Tmol yr−1; equivalent to 2%–7% of total burial on continental margins. Existing global data permit a simple relationship between BSi rain rate to the seafloor and the accumulation of unaltered BSi, giving the possibility to reconstruct rain rates and primary production from the sediment archive in addition to benthic Si turnover in global models.
Highlights
Silicic acid (H4SiO4) is an important nutrient for groups of phytoplankton such as diatoms and silicoflagellates (Dugdale et al, 1995)
The data show that the mean BSi burial efficiency (BSiBE) for the Peruvian margin is similar to the global mean of ∼15% reported by Tréguer and De La Rocha (2013)
An extensive set of data on silica cycling in sediments on the Peruvian margin has been analyzed
Summary
Silicic acid (H4SiO4) is an important nutrient for groups of phytoplankton such as diatoms and silicoflagellates (Dugdale et al, 1995). Silicic acid is biomineralized to amorphous biogenic silica (BSi, biogenic opal SiO2) that constitutes the hard exoskeletons and tests of these organisms. Most BSi that is synthesized in the surface ocean is solubilized back to silicic acid in situ, with around one third of new production surviving dissolution in the ocean interior to reach the seafloor (Tréguer & De La Rocha, 2013). Around 80%–90% of the deposited flux is recycled back to silicic acid, such that only a minor fraction (
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