Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/10553/74502
Title: Variability in Water-Column Respiration and Its Dependence on Organic Carbon Sources in the Canary Current Upwelling Region
Authors: Arístegui, Javier 
Montero, María F. 
Hernández-Hernández, Nauzet 
Alonso-González, Iván J.
Baltar, Federico
Calleja, Maria Ll
Duarte, Carlos M.
UNESCO Clasification: 251001 Oceanografía biológica
Keywords: Canary Current Upwelling Region
Dissolved Organic Carbon
Ets Activity
Mesopelagic Respiration Variability
Suspended And Sinking Particulate Organic Carbon
Issue Date: 2020
Project: Flujos de Carbono en Un Sistema de Afloramiento Costero (Cabo Blanco, Nw de Africa). Papel Del Carbono Disuelto y en Suspension en El Contexto de la Bomba Biologica. 
COCA (REN20001471-C02-01-MAR)
e-IMPACT (PID2019-109084RB-C2)
Tropical and South Atlantic - climate-based marine ecosystem prediction for sustainable management 
Sustainable management of mesopelagic resources 
Journal: Frontiers in Earth Science 
Abstract: Plankton respiration (R) is a key factor governing the ocean carbon cycle. However, although the ocean supports respiratory activity throughout its entire volume, to our knowledge there are no studies that tackle both the spatial and temporal variability of respiration in the dark ocean and its dependence on organic carbon sources. Here, we have studied the variability of epipelagic and mesopelagic R via the enzymatic activity of the electron transport system (ETS) in microbial communities, along two zonal sections (21°N and 26°N) extending from the northwest African coastal upwelling to the open-ocean waters of the North Atlantic subtropical gyre, during the fall 2002 and the spring 2003. Overall, integrated R in epipelagic (Repi; 0–200 m) waters, was similar during the two periods, while integrated mesopelagic respiration (Rmeso; 200–1000 m) was >25% higher in the fall. The two seasons, however, exhibited contrasting zonal and meridional patterns of ETS distribution in the water column, largely influenced by upwelling effects and associated mesoscale variability. Multiple linear regression between average R and average concentrations of dissolved organic carbon (DOC) and slow-sinking (suspended) particulate organic carbon (POCsus) indicates that POCsus is the main contributor to Rmeso, supporting previous results in the same area. Rmeso exceeded satellite-derived net primary production (NPP) at all stations except at the most coastal ones, with the imbalance increasing offshore. Moreover, the export flux of sinking POC collected at 200 m with sediment traps, represented on average less than 6% of the NPP. All this indicates that Rmeso depends largely on small particles with low sinking rates, which would be laterally advected at mid water depths from the continental margin toward the open ocean, or transported by mesoscale features from the surface to the mesopelagic ocean, providing support to inferences from modeling studies in the region.
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10553/74502
ISSN: 2296-6463
DOI: 10.3389/feart.2020.00349
Source: Frontiers in Earth Science [EISSN 2296-6463], v. 8, (Agosto 2020)
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