Abstract

In oceanic subtropical gyres, primary producers are numerically dominated by small (1–5 µm diameter) pro- and eukaryotic cells that primarily utilize recycled nutrients produced by rapid grazing turnover in a highly efficient microbial loop. Continuous losses of nitrogen (N) to depth by sinking, either as single cells, aggregates or fecal pellets, are balanced by both nitrate inputs at the base of the euphotic zone and N2-fixation. This input of new N to balance export losses (the biological pump) is a fundamental aspect of N cycling and central to understanding carbon fluxes in the ocean. In the Pacific Ocean, detailed N budgets at the time-series station HOT require upward transport of nitrate from the nutricline (80–100 m) into the surface layer (∼0–40 m) to balance productivity and export needs. However, concentration gradients are negligible and cannot support the fluxes. Physical processes can inject nitrate into the base of the euphotic zone, but the mechanisms for transporting this nitrate into the surface layer across many 10s of m in highly stratified systems are unknown. In these seas, vertical migration by the very largest (102–103 µm diameter) phytoplankton is common as a survival strategy to obtain N from sub-euphotic zone depths. This vertical migration is driven by buoyancy changes rather than by flagellated movement and can provide upward N transport as nitrate (mM concentrations) in the cells. However, the contribution of vertical migration to nitrate transport has been difficult to quantify over the required basin scales. In this study, we use towed optical systems and isotopic tracers to show that migrating diatom (Rhizosolenia) mats are widespread in the N. Pacific Ocean from 140°W to 175°E and together with other migrating phytoplankton (Ethmodiscus, Halosphaera, Pyrocystis, and solitary Rhizosolenia) can mediate time-averaged transport of N (235 µmol N m-2 d-1) equivalent to eddy nitrate injections (242 µmol NO3− m-2 d-1). This upward biotic transport can close N budgets in the upper 250 m of the central Pacific Ocean and together with diazotrophy creates a surface zone where biological nutrient inputs rather than physical processes dominate the new N flux. In addition to these numerically rare large migrators, there is evidence in the literature of ascending behavior in small phytoplankton that could contribute to upward flux as well. Although passive downward movement has dominated models of phytoplankton flux, there is now sufficient evidence to require a rethinking of this paradigm. Quantifying these fluxes is a challenge for the future and requires a reexamination of individual phytoplankton sinking rates as well as methods for capturing and enumerating ascending phytoplankton in the sea.

Highlights

  • Nitrogen (N) in the euphotic zone of the open sea has long been recognized to partition into two distinct pools of availability (Dugdale & Goering, 1967)

  • The f ratio increases in the light-limited lower depths of the euphotic zone due to the increased availability of nitrate at the nutricline, creating what has been recognized as a two-layered structure in the Sargasso Sea of near zero f ratios in the mixed layer and elevated f ratios at or near the nutricline (Goldman, 1988)

  • This general pattern can be modified in regions of low iron input, where iron availability limits macronutrient consumption creating regions of high nutrient-low chlorophyll (HNLC) where low phytoplankton biomass persists despite elevated nutrient concentrations

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Summary

Introduction

Nitrogen (N) in the euphotic zone of the open sea has long been recognized to partition into two distinct pools of availability (Dugdale & Goering, 1967). The f ratio increases in the light-limited lower depths of the euphotic zone due to the increased availability of nitrate at the nutricline, creating what has been recognized as a two-layered structure in the Sargasso Sea of near zero f ratios in the mixed layer and elevated f ratios at or near the nutricline (Goldman, 1988) This general pattern can be modified in regions of low iron input, where iron availability limits macronutrient consumption creating regions of high nutrient-low chlorophyll (HNLC) where low phytoplankton biomass persists despite elevated nutrient concentrations (de Baar et al, 2005). It is unclear whether it can provide the produce oxygen anomalies used as geochemical signatures (Jenkins & Goldman, 1985) to calculate export loss-based new production estimates

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