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Nitrate isotopes as a constraint on the ocean's fixed N budget Angela Knapp, University of Southern California Peter DiFiore, Princeton University Curtis Deutsch, UCLA Fred Lipschultz, BIOS Sargasso Sea nitrate N isotopes, GCM experiments, and Atlantic N 2 fixation Daniel Sigman, Princeton University
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Talk outline Nitrate N isotopes from a Sargasso Sea transect: estimate of “recently” fixed nitrate in Sargasso Sea water column MOM3 simulations forced with various Atlantic N 2 fixation fields predict recently fixed nitrate in the Sargasso Sea Uncertainties: impact of other processes on the N isotopes of nitrate Nitrate O isotopes: correct nitrate N isotopes for nitrate assimilation?
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N and O isotopes N : 14 N 99.6337% 15 N 0.3663% O : 16 O 99.7630% 17 O 0.0375% 18 O 0.1995% 15 N (vs. atm. N 2 ) = ( ( ( 15 N/ 14 N) sample / ( 15 N/ 14 N) air ) - 1 ) *1000‰ 18 O (vs. VSMOW) = ( ( ( 18 O/ 16 O) sample / ( 18 O/ 16 O) VSMOW ) - 1 ) *1000‰
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Kinetic isotope effect 14 k 15 k 16 k 18 k
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Complementary constraints from [NO 3 - ], N* and 15 N N*
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Depth BATS Validation Cruise 32 (October, 2002): Stations sampled for nitrate and DON isotopes Increasing N 2 fixation? ~2 yr vent. age increase
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Nitrate data N 2 fix.? NO 3 - assim.?
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Nitrate 15 N in the Sargasso Sea water column 15 N of nitrate (‰ vs. air) [NO 3 - ] (µM) No evidence of southward N 2 fixation increase or a southward accumulation of newly fixed nitrate in the thermocline Basis for average Sargasso Sea profile
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Estimating ‘recently’ fixed nitrate ( 15 N - 15 N imported ) ( 15 N new - 15 N imported ) f = (5.3‰ - 15 N) 6.3‰ =
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From a recently fixed nitrate pool to a N 2 fixation rate Atlantic SN SN “Plan A” “Plan B”
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Deutsch et al. 2007 Atlantic field; 45°N-S; 27.85 Tg N yr -1 Gruber and Sarmiento 1997; 45°N-0°; 28.1 Tg N yr -1 GS ‘97 N. Atl. rate extended to 45°N-45°S; 56.1 Tg N yr -1 MOM4 simulations of the recently fixed nitrate field
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Recently fixed NO 3 - (mol N m -2 ) Total NO 3 - (mol N m -2 ) Recent/ Total data This study0.813.030.27 models Deutsch0.773.480.22 GS I1.243.990.31 GS II1.974.800.41 data This study1.0216.780.06 models Deutsch2.3018.190.13 GS I3.2619.200.17 GS II5.6321.710.26 0-600 m 0-1200 m Column inventories
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N 2 fixation distribution Recently fixed NO 3 - in North Atlantic Recently fixed NO 3 - in South Atlantic GS I (North Atlantic only) 63.1%36.9% GS II’ (North + South Atlantic) 54.0%46.0% GS III’ (South Atlantic only) 44.1%55.9% Interhemispheric exchange of recently fixed nitrate Hemispheric asymmetry: North Atlantic tends to collect recently fixed nitrate
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15 N enrichment in the nitrate entering the Atlantic? Southern Ocean data Sigman et al. 1999
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Uniform nitrate 18 O below 300 m in this region 15 N of nitrate (‰ vs. air) “ 18 O-corrected” 15 N of nitrate 18 O of nitrate (‰ vs. SMOW)
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Low latitude N cycling and the loss of nitrate O isotope signals The O isotopes may not record the N and O isotope enrichment of imported nitrate.
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High nitrate 18 O in the shallow Sargasso Sea 15 N of nitrate (‰ vs. air) “ 18 O-corrected” 15 N of nitrate 18 O of nitrate (‰ vs. SMOW) 18 / 15 = 1.0
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Decoupling of nitrate N and O isotopes by simultaneous nitrate assimilation and nitrification Monterey Bay: Wankel et al., 2007
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Conclusions Nitrate N isotopes indicate 2 µM or more of recently fixed nitrate in the Sargasso Sea thermocline. Coherent spatial trends are not apparent in the region studied. This suggests that gradients in N 2 fixation are too weak to imprint nitrate N isotope gradients on the circulating thermocline. We did not sample an adequately wide range in ventilation age to follow the ‘isopycnal’ approach used by Gruber and Sarmiento (1997) for N*. We essentially follow a diapycnal approach by our use of MOM3 with high latitude sponge walls. In this context, the isotope data suggest a relatively low rate for N 2 fixation in the Atlantic (30 Tg N yr -1 or less, a la Deutsch et al. 1997). Uncertainties include the possible impacts of nitrate assimilation inside and outside the Atlantic on the 15 N of nitrate in the interior. The nitrate O isotopes were discussed in this context. GEOTRACES should provide the opportunity to do this for real.
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The End
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What if N 2 fixation abounds where denitrification is prevalent? Deutsch et al. 2004
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Low nitrate 15 N in the Sargasso Sea thermocline: Consistent with N 2 fixation input Knapp et al. 2005
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Conclusions Nitrate N and O isotopes have fundamentally different behavior, making them powerful complements. Coupled N and O isotope systematics: –Newly produced nitrate: 18 O ~ 0‰ vs. SMOW –Nitrate assimilation: 18 = 15 (~ 5-10‰) –Denitrification: 18 = 15 (20-30‰) Application to the eastern North Pacific margin: – 18 O: 15 N anomaly ( (15,18) min.) in the thermocline –Interpretations: addition of low- 15 N N from N 2 fixation an active NO 3 - /NO 2 - redox cycle in or near the suboxic zone
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15 N enrichment in the nitrate entering the Atlantic? Southern Ocean data DiFiore et al. 2006 SAMW ~ 7.2‰
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Algal nitrate assimilation: 18 ~ 15 Granger et al., 2004 Progressive nitrate consumption 18 / 15 = 1.0
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The cycle and budget of N in the ocean NO 3 - N 2 N 2 N org ( NO 3 - )
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Complementary constraints from [NO 3 - ], N* and 15 N
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N isotopes in the whole ocean N budget Brandes and Devol 2002
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Denitritification: 18 ~ 15 Granger et al., in review 18 / 15 = 0.95
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Decoupling of nitrate N and O isotopes by simultaneous nitrate assimilation and nitrification Monterey Bay: Wankel et al., 2007
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The nitrate O isotopes are useful because of what they don’t record
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Summary of systematics
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N 2 fixation distribution Recently fixed NO 3 - in North Atlantic Recently fixed NO 3 - in South Atlantic GS I (North Atlantic only) 65.7%34.3% GS II (North + South Atlantic) 55.0%45.0% GS III (South Atlantic only) 47.1%52.9% Hemispheric asymmetry
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Stations on the Baja California margin Contour every 750 m [O 2 ]<5 µM van Geen cruise, Nov. 1999
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All stations Red = N (~Point Conception) Blue = S (~S tip of Baja)
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Deviations from 1:1 variation in nitrate 18 O and 15 N Southern Baja stationsAll stations (15,18) = 15 N - 18 O - 5.5‰
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Figure 3 a. c. b. d.
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Nitrate isotopes near southern tip of Baja
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Cause of the (15,18) minimum?
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NO 3 - NO 2 - …
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Quantifying putative processes from the (15,18) anomaly For 200-800 m: N 2 fix. ~ 0.65*denit. N* minimum: -12 µM -24 µM At 200 m: NO 2 - ox. > 0.7*NO 2 - red.
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Bering Sea shelf: O/N isotope decoupling by in situ nitrification B. Brunelle M.B.: Wankel et al.
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Polar Antarctic nitrate isotope fractionation P. Difiore
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Southern Baja station results compared to stations further North
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HOT Station ALOHA Is the open tropical Pacific the source of the (15,18) minimum ?
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ENP vs. HOT
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N 2 fixation = 0.65*denitrification [NO 3 - ] B - [NO 3 - ] M Nitrate 15 N Nitrate (15,18) observations (200-800 m)
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NO 2 - oxidation > 0.7*NO 2 - reduction at 200 m Assumptions: (1) 15 NiO = 15 NiR, (2) 18 / 15 NiO = 18 / 15 NiR
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Why no anomaly in the Santa Barbara Basin?
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Where there is very little dissolved [O 2 ], … Deutsch et al. 2004
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J. Granger, unpub. Marine denitrification: 18 ~ 15 Progressive nitrate consumption
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Model quantification of putative N 2 fixation
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NO 2 - oxidation ~ 0.85*NO 2 - reduction at 200 m Assumptions: (1) complete NO 2 - /H 2 O O exchange; (2) 15 NiO = 15 NiR
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Oceanic N Budget N 2 Fixation Rivers Atmosphere Inputs Total Benthic Denit. W.C. Denit. Sedimentation Outputs Total Imbalance Residence time Flux (TgN/yr) Codispoti and Christensen 1985 Gruber and Sarmiento 1997 Brandes and Devol 2002 25 75 60 21 141 125 42 15 182 85 80 15 180 -66+2 110-330 25 160-380 200-280 75 25 300-380 0 or -200 > 5000 yr~ 3500 yr< 2000 yr inputs outputs N 2 N org ( NO 3 - ) NO 3 - N 2
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NO 3 - NO 2 - NO 3 - NO 2 - NH 4 + Organic nitrogen VACUOLE CHLOROPLAST a b c d Figure 4 -- Granger et al.
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Open tropical Pacific: source of the minimum ??
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Quantifying putative NO 3 - /NO 2 - cycling from the (15,18) anomaly
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Figure 9
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Internal ocean cycle (algal assimilation/remineralization) dominates variations in nitrate concentration WOCE data; ODV: R. Schlitzer
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Mechanism for isotope fractionation during algal nitrate assimilation Needoba et al., 2004 Granger et al., 2004
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Isotope fractionation during denitrification: two nitrate reduction enzymes 18 ~ 15 18 ~ 0.6* 15
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Variation in the isotope fractionation of nitrate assimilation: balanced vs. unbalanced growth
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The imprint of the N budget is overwhelmed by the N cycle Trick: Remove the ‘cycle’ component using PO 4 3-
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SBB versus open ETNP
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Low NO 3 - 15 N in the Sargasso Sea thermocline: Consistent with N 2 fixation source for excess NO 3 - Knapp et al., 2005
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Granger et al., 2004
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Needoba et al. in press light-limited Comparing the 15 N/ 14 N of internal pool nitrate and medium nitrate in a cultured diatom (T. weiss.) Isotope effect of nitrate assimilation light/dark limited by iron or T
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Biogeochemical conditions along the ENP margin
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M. Lehmann and A. Knapp, unpublished
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A. Knapp, unpublished Sargasso Sea
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Stabilizing feedbacks in the ocean N budget
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Quantifying putative N 2 fixation from the (15,18) anomaly
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Model quantification of putative N 2 fixation
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J. Granger, unpublished Marine denitrification: 18 ~ 15
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J. Granger, unpublished Marine denitrification: 18 ~ 15
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Nitrification produces NO 3 - with 18 O ~ 0‰ Subtropical North Atlantic, Bermuda -- Puerto Rico; A. Knapp, unpub. All nitrate remineralized
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Figure 5 a.b.c.
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Nitrate 15 N and 18 O in the Sargasso Sea water column 18 O of nitrate (‰ vs. SMOW)
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Nitrate 15 N and 18 O in the Sargasso Sea water column 18 O sal of nitrate (‰ vs. SMOW)
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Nitrate 15 N and 18 O in the Sargasso Sea water column 15 N of nitrate (‰ vs. air) corrected for assimilation with 18 O
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Nitrate 15 N and 18 O in the Sargasso Sea water column ∆(15,18) sal of nitrate
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