The role of benthic foraminifera in the benthic nitrogen cycle of the Peruvian oxygen minimum zone
Autor: | Jürgen Mallon, Stefan Sommer, Joachim Schönfeld, Nicolaas Glock, Anton Eisenhauer, Christian Hensen |
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Rok vydání: | 2013 |
Předmět: |
0106 biological sciences
Biogeochemical cycle Denitrification 010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciences lcsh:Life Oxygen minimum zone 01 natural sciences Foraminifera chemistry.chemical_compound Nitrate lcsh:QH540-549.5 14. Life underwater Nitrogen cycle Ecology Evolution Behavior and Systematics Earth-Surface Processes 0105 earth and related environmental sciences biology 010604 marine biology & hydrobiology lcsh:QE1-996.5 biology.organism_classification lcsh:Geology lcsh:QH501-531 Oceanography chemistry Benthic zone 13. Climate action Environmental science lcsh:Ecology Energy source |
Zdroj: | Biogeosciences (BG), 10 . pp. 4767-4783. Biogeosciences, Vol 10, Iss 7, Pp 4767-4783 (2013) |
ISSN: | 1726-4189 |
Popis: | The discovery that foraminifera are able to use nitrate instead of oxygen as an electron acceptor for respiration has challenged our understanding of nitrogen cycling in the ocean. It was thought before that only prokaryotes and some fungi are able to denitrify. Rate estimates of foraminiferal denitrification have been very sparse and limited to specific regions in the oceans, not comparing stations along a transect of a certain region. Here, we present estimates of benthic foraminiferal denitrification rates from six stations at intermediate water depths in and below the Peruvian oxygen minimum zone (OMZ). Foraminiferal denitrification rates were calculated from abundance and assemblage composition of the total living fauna in both surface and subsurface sediments, as well as from individual species specific denitrification rates. A comparison with total benthic denitrification rates as inferred by biogeochemical models revealed that benthic foraminifera probably account for the total denitrification in shelf sediments between 80 and 250 m water depth. The estimations also imply that foraminifera are still important denitrifiers in the centre of the OMZ around 320 m (29–50% of the benthic denitrification), but play only a minor role at the lower OMZ boundary and below the OMZ between 465 and 700 m (2–6% of total benthic denitrification). Furthermore, foraminiferal denitrification has been compared to the total benthic nitrate loss measured during benthic chamber experiments. The estimated foraminiferal denitrification rates contribute 2 to 46% to the total nitrate loss across a depth transect from 80 to 700 m, respectively. Flux rate estimates range from 0.01 to 1.3 mmol m−2 d−1. Furthermore we show that the amount of nitrate stored in living benthic foraminifera (3 to 3955 μmol L−1) can be higher by three orders of magnitude as compared to the ambient pore waters in near-surface sediments sustaining an important nitrate reservoir in Peruvian OMZ sediments. The substantial contribution of foraminiferal nitrate respiration to total benthic nitrate loss at the Peruvian margin, which is one of the main nitrate sink regions in the world ocean, underpins the importance of the previously underestimated role of benthic foraminifera in global biogeochemical cycles. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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