Funded Research - Project Profile: Santoro-01
Project Title: Surface Versus Subsurface Controls on Microbial Attenuation of Sinking Particulate Flux in the Mesopelagic Ocean
Project Lead: Alyson Santoro, UC Santa Barbara
NRA: 2016 NASA: Ocean Biology and Biogeochemistry
Abstract:
Sinking particulate organic matter is a major route of carbon
export from the sunlit surface ocean to the ocean's interior. Both
single-celled microbes and zooplankton play a role in setting the fate
of particles in subsurface mesopelagic waters. Microbes exploit the
rain of carbon-rich material as a substrate for growth, often
attaching to sinking particles, partially dissolving them and
respiring the carbon as CO2. Although we know that particle flux is
markedly attenuated with depth, predicting the microbial contribution
to this loss term using surface measurements is currently not
possible. The goal of this proposal is to develop a mechanistic link
between microbial attenuation of sinking particle flux and surface
ocean properties, with the following objectives:
- Measure, in situ, the magnitude of microbial respiration as a
sink for carbon throughout the upper mesopelagic during the two
EXPORTS field campaigns
- Refine the existing conceptual model of the relationship between
surface ecosystems, subsurface biogeochemical characteristics,
microbial respiration, and transfer efficiency of carbon through the
mesopelagic
- Develop a predictive subsurface particle remineralization model
that can be incorporated into EXPORTS data products
To accomplish these objectives, we will deploy replicated sets of
particle capture devices equipped with oxygen optode-based respiration
chambers throughout the mesopelagic during the EXPORTS field
campaigns. These systems, known as RESPIRE traps, allow for the in
situ capture of sinking particles and subsequent tracking of oxygen
consumption. We will compare respiration rates to subsurface ecosystem
and biogeochemical characteristics including particle sinking rates,
geochemical characterization of particles, and microbial community
structure. We will further compare our results to remotely-sensed
properties such as net primary production, phytoplankton community
composition, and particle size spectra to determine the mechanistic
basis for the relationship between surface ocean properties and
subsurface activity. This research will determine the importance of
microbial processes relative to other potential sinks, such as
zooplankton particle consumption.
Keywords: none
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