Abstract

A seasonally-varying sedimentation pattern was observed for the alkenone flux measured with sediment traps in the northern North Atlantic. In the Norwegian Sea (traps were set at 500, 1000 and 3000 m) the alkenone flux varied between 0.1 and 7.1 μg m −2 d −1 and followed the seasonal pattern of the bulk parameters. Maximum fluxes occurred from mid-October until mid-November and were also high in May. A surprising result was that considerably higher particle fluxes were observed at 3000 m. For the alkenone flux, the highest additional input of 250% was observed during the period when sediment resuspension was greatest in summer. At the Barents Sea continental margin (traps at 1840 and 1950 m) the alkenone fluxes follow the sedimentation pattern of the bulk parameters, with a less visible signal of distinct seasonality observed in the 1950 m trap. The sedimentation of total alkenones varied between 0.8 and 144 μg m −2 d −1 at 1840 m and between 0.5 and 31.0 μg m −2 d −1 at 1950 m. Resuspension and lateral advection contributed significantly to measured fluxes in the two near-bottom traps. Alkenone concentrations were determined in faecal pellets of Appendicularia, ostracods and euphausids from selected samples at the Barents Sea site. The alkenone flux in pellets (4% to 24% of total) was 5 to 6 times higher at 1950 m depth than at 1840 m and the major part (77–78%) of the total flux of C 37:3 reaching the near-bottom trap at 1950 m was associated with faecal pellets of the meso-zooplankton. Spatial and temporal variations of the U 37 k′ signals were observed, indicating that the imprint in the alkenone signal depends on the origin and transport pathway of the organic material. Strong deviations occur in areas where nepheloid layers contribute particles of long residence times to the primary flux.

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