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Carbon cycling in the deep eastern North Pacific benthic food web: Investigating the effect of organic carbon input

Carbon cycling in the deep eastern North Pacific benthic food web: Investigating the effect of organic carbon input
Carbon cycling in the deep eastern North Pacific benthic food web: Investigating the effect of organic carbon input
The deep ocean benthic environment plays a role in long-term carbon sequestration. Understanding carbon cycling in the deep ocean floor is critical to evaluate the impact of changing climate on the oceanic systems. Linear inverse modeling was used to quantify carbon transfer between compartments in the benthic food web at a long time-series study site in the abyssal northeastern Pacific (Station M). Linear inverse food web models were constructed for three separate years in the time-series when particulate organic carbon (POC) flux was relatively high (1990: 0.63 mean mmol C m?2 d?1), intermediate (1995: 0.24) and low (1996: 0.12). Carbon cycling in all years was dominated by the flows involved in the microbial loop; dissolved organic carbon uptake by microbes (0.80–0.95 mean mmol C m?2 d?1), microbial respiration (0.52–0.61), microbial biomass dissolution (0.09–0.18) and the dissolution of refractory detritus (0.46–0.65). Moreover, the magnitude of carbon flows involved in the microbial loop changed in relation to POC input, with a decline in contribution during the high POC influxes, such as those recently experienced at Station M. Results indicate that during high POC episodic pulses the role of faunal mediated carbon cycling would increase. Semi-labile detritus dominates benthic faunal diets and the role of labile detritus declined with increased total POC input. Linear inverse modeling represents an effective framework to analyze high-resolution time-series data and demonstrate the impact of climate change on the deep ocean carbon cycle in a coastal upwelling system.
0024-3590
1956-1968
Dunlop, Katherine M.
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van Oevelen, Dick
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Ruhl, Henry A.
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Huffard, Christine L.
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Kuhnz, Linda A.
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Smith, Kenneth L.
c282f721-59cf-4caa-a344-f4a26f6b534c
Dunlop, Katherine M.
d7079b8b-8821-45d2-9622-7b494c5af344
van Oevelen, Dick
7a75c2d2-d59c-4f35-a3da-8ff31d375b61
Ruhl, Henry A.
177608ef-7793-4911-86cf-cd9960ff22b6
Huffard, Christine L.
888a9c43-4643-4865-9c70-0b324f42d54b
Kuhnz, Linda A.
befd3e56-3c8f-442b-9080-bb9de02fc9df
Smith, Kenneth L.
c282f721-59cf-4caa-a344-f4a26f6b534c

Dunlop, Katherine M., van Oevelen, Dick, Ruhl, Henry A., Huffard, Christine L., Kuhnz, Linda A. and Smith, Kenneth L. (2016) Carbon cycling in the deep eastern North Pacific benthic food web: Investigating the effect of organic carbon input. Limnology and Oceanography, 61 (6), 1956-1968. (doi:10.1002/lno.10345).

Record type: Article

Abstract

The deep ocean benthic environment plays a role in long-term carbon sequestration. Understanding carbon cycling in the deep ocean floor is critical to evaluate the impact of changing climate on the oceanic systems. Linear inverse modeling was used to quantify carbon transfer between compartments in the benthic food web at a long time-series study site in the abyssal northeastern Pacific (Station M). Linear inverse food web models were constructed for three separate years in the time-series when particulate organic carbon (POC) flux was relatively high (1990: 0.63 mean mmol C m?2 d?1), intermediate (1995: 0.24) and low (1996: 0.12). Carbon cycling in all years was dominated by the flows involved in the microbial loop; dissolved organic carbon uptake by microbes (0.80–0.95 mean mmol C m?2 d?1), microbial respiration (0.52–0.61), microbial biomass dissolution (0.09–0.18) and the dissolution of refractory detritus (0.46–0.65). Moreover, the magnitude of carbon flows involved in the microbial loop changed in relation to POC input, with a decline in contribution during the high POC influxes, such as those recently experienced at Station M. Results indicate that during high POC episodic pulses the role of faunal mediated carbon cycling would increase. Semi-labile detritus dominates benthic faunal diets and the role of labile detritus declined with increased total POC input. Linear inverse modeling represents an effective framework to analyze high-resolution time-series data and demonstrate the impact of climate change on the deep ocean carbon cycle in a coastal upwelling system.

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Accepted/In Press date: 2 May 2016
e-pub ahead of print date: 8 July 2016
Published date: November 2016
Organisations: Marine Biogeochemistry

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 398002
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/398002
ISSN: 0024-3590
PURE UUID: c6847af6-469e-4c94-a456-40d532b33060

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Date deposited: 13 Jul 2016 14:20
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 01:26

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Contributors

Author: Katherine M. Dunlop
Author: Dick van Oevelen
Author: Henry A. Ruhl
Author: Christine L. Huffard
Author: Linda A. Kuhnz
Author: Kenneth L. Smith

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