Identificador persistente para citar o vincular este elemento: http://hdl.handle.net/10553/49817
Título: Biogeochemistry and hydrography in the eastern subtropical North Atlantic gyre. Results from the European time-series station ESTOC
Autores/as: Neuer, Susanne
Cianca, Andres
Helmke, Peer
Freudenthal, Tim
Davenport, Robert
Meggers, Helge
Knoll, Michaela
Santana-Casiano, J. Magdalena 
González-Davila, Melchor 
Rueda, Maria José 
Llinás Gonzalez, Octavio 
Clasificación UNESCO: 251002 Oceanografía química
Palabras clave: North Atlantic subtropical gyre
Canary Islands
Time-series observations
Ocean biogeochemistry
Fecha de publicación: 2007
Editor/a: 0079-6611
Publicación seriada: Progress in Oceanography 
Resumen: Basin wide modeling studies have revealed a clear asymmetry of the biogeochemistry across the subtropical North Atlantic gyre, mainly relating to the magnitude and processes of nutrient supply and new and export production. Time-series measurements of the actual biogeography are needed to confirm and understand the inherent asymmetry. Here we present the first comprehensive time-series measurements carried out in the eastern boundary system of the subtropical North Atlantic gyre at the European Station for Time-Series in the Ocean, Canary Islands (ESTOC), located 100 km north of the Canary Islands. Standard water column properties have been measured at the station since 1994 at monthly intervals; monthly measurements of were added in 1996. There was a clear seasonality in phytoplankton development, with winter maxima of surface chlorophyll of around 0.4 mg Chlorophyll m−3, coinciding with the time of deepest winter mixing. The interannual variability in primary production, new production and net community production was mainly influenced by the onset and depth of wintertime mixing, relative to the depth of the nitracline in a given year. Yearly primary production estimated from in situ chlorophyll a and applying a bio-optical model varied from about 11 to 14 mol C m−2 yr−1. Net community production (NCP) estimated by the net change of dissolved inorganic carbon due to biological processes was always positive, contradicting earlier notions of a heterotrophic subtropical NE Atlantic, and ranged from 2 to 5 mol C m−2 yr−1. New production (NP), estimated as the potential phytoplankton production fuelled by the available nitrate in the euphotic zone due to wintertime convection and mesoscale uplift, ranged from 0.7 to 2.6 mol C m−2 yr−1. The discrepancy between NCP and NP is indicative of carbon-overconsumption in the mixed layer. Particulate organic carbon (POC) flux measured with shallow, moored, time-series traps, and in some years with surface tethered traps, amounted to about 0.2 mol C m−2 yr−1 at 150 m, on average a tenth to a fifth of NP and with little interannual variability. The difference between NP and POC flux may be explained by remineralization of organic carbon below the euphotic zone, export of dissolved organic carbon, active organic carbon export by migrating zooplankton as well as sampling errors. The little known seasonality of the decomposition of particulate matter below the mixed layer is also a possible source of underestimation of POC flux; we found evidence that highest POC flux in winter/spring was concomitant with the strongest decrease of flux with depth. This seasonality means that a single average exponent cannot be used in the power function for extrapolating flux from deeper to shallower depths. We identified short-term peaks in POC flux during the stratified summer period that we attribute to possible mesoscale uplift of the nitracline higher into the euphotic zone, triggering episodic production events.
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10553/49817
ISSN: 0079-6611
DOI: 10.1016/j.pocean.2006.08.001
Fuente: Progress in Oceanography [ISSN 0079-6611], v. 72, p. 1-29
Colección:Reseña
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