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Biogeochemical controls on ammonium accumulation in the surface layer of the TD: Southern Ocean

The production and assimilation of ammonium (NH₄⁺) are essential upper-ocean nitrogen (N) cycle pathways. However, in the Southern Ocean where the alternation between biological nitrate drawdown in summer and physical nitrate resupply in winter is central for setting atmospheric CO2, the active cycl...

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Main Author: Smith, Shantelle
Other Authors: Altieri, Katye
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Department of Oceanography 2023
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access_status_str Open Access
author Smith, Shantelle
author2 Altieri, Katye
author_browse Altieri, Katye
Smith, Shantelle
author_facet Altieri, Katye
Smith, Shantelle
author_sort Smith, Shantelle
collection Thesis
description The production and assimilation of ammonium (NH₄⁺) are essential upper-ocean nitrogen (N) cycle pathways. However, in the Southern Ocean where the alternation between biological nitrate drawdown in summer and physical nitrate resupply in winter is central for setting atmospheric CO2, the active cycling of NH₄⁺ in the seasonally-varying mixed layer remains poorly understood. On a cruise from Cape Town (33.9°S) to the Marginal Ice Zone (MIZ; 61.4°S) in winter 2017, surface samples were collected and analysed for nutrient concentrations, planktonic community composition, size-fractionated rates of net primary production and N (as NH₄⁺, urea, and nitrate) uptake, and rates of NH₄⁺ oxidation. NH₄⁺ concentrations, measured every four hours, were five-fold higher than is typical for summer, and lower north than south of the Subantarctic Front (SAF; 0.01–0.26 µM versus 0.19–0.70 µM). Thus, showing that NH₄⁺ accumulates in the Southern Ocean's winter mixed layer, particularly in polar waters. NH₄⁺ uptake rates were highest near the Polar Front (PF; 12.9 ± 0.4 nM day-1 ) and in the Subantarctic Zone (10.0 ± 1.5 nM day-1), decreasing towards the MIZ (3.0 ± 0.8 nM day-1) despite the high ambient NH₄⁺ concentrations, likely due to the low temperatures and limited light. By contrast, rates of NH₄⁺ oxidation were higher south than north of the PF (16.0 ± 0.8 versus 11.1 ± 0.5 nM day-1), perhaps due to the lower light and higher iron concentrations characteristic of polar waters. Additional NH₄⁺ concentration measurements spanning the 2018/2019 annual cycle suggest that mixed-layer NH₄⁺ accumulation south of the SAF is due to sustained heterotrophic NH₄⁺ production in late summer through winter that outpaces NH₄⁺ removal by temperature-, light, and iron-limited microorganisms. The contribution by heterotrophic prokaryotes is supported by observations from winter 2017, where lower ratios of photosynthetic-to-heterotrophic cells were associated with maxima in NH₄⁺ concentrations. These observations imply that the Southern Ocean 27 becomes a biological source of CO₂ to the atmosphere in autumn and winter, not only because nitrate drawdown is weak, but also because the ambient conditions favour net heterotrophy and NH₄⁺ accumulation. High wintertime surface NH4 + concentrations, and the drivers of biological NH4 + cycling, may also have implications for nitrate uptake, through inhibition, and for the air-sea flux of ammonia gas, with the latter influencing the formation of aerosols, clouds, and climate.
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language eng
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license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2023
publishDateRange 2023
publishDateSort 2023
publisher Department of Oceanography
publisherStr Department of Oceanography
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source_str UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/37159 Biogeochemical controls on ammonium accumulation in the surface layer of the TD: Southern Ocean Smith, Shantelle Altieri, Katye Fawcett, Sarah Oceanography The production and assimilation of ammonium (NH₄⁺) are essential upper-ocean nitrogen (N) cycle pathways. However, in the Southern Ocean where the alternation between biological nitrate drawdown in summer and physical nitrate resupply in winter is central for setting atmospheric CO2, the active cycling of NH₄⁺ in the seasonally-varying mixed layer remains poorly understood. On a cruise from Cape Town (33.9°S) to the Marginal Ice Zone (MIZ; 61.4°S) in winter 2017, surface samples were collected and analysed for nutrient concentrations, planktonic community composition, size-fractionated rates of net primary production and N (as NH₄⁺, urea, and nitrate) uptake, and rates of NH₄⁺ oxidation. NH₄⁺ concentrations, measured every four hours, were five-fold higher than is typical for summer, and lower north than south of the Subantarctic Front (SAF; 0.01–0.26 µM versus 0.19–0.70 µM). Thus, showing that NH₄⁺ accumulates in the Southern Ocean's winter mixed layer, particularly in polar waters. NH₄⁺ uptake rates were highest near the Polar Front (PF; 12.9 ± 0.4 nM day-1 ) and in the Subantarctic Zone (10.0 ± 1.5 nM day-1), decreasing towards the MIZ (3.0 ± 0.8 nM day-1) despite the high ambient NH₄⁺ concentrations, likely due to the low temperatures and limited light. By contrast, rates of NH₄⁺ oxidation were higher south than north of the PF (16.0 ± 0.8 versus 11.1 ± 0.5 nM day-1), perhaps due to the lower light and higher iron concentrations characteristic of polar waters. Additional NH₄⁺ concentration measurements spanning the 2018/2019 annual cycle suggest that mixed-layer NH₄⁺ accumulation south of the SAF is due to sustained heterotrophic NH₄⁺ production in late summer through winter that outpaces NH₄⁺ removal by temperature-, light, and iron-limited microorganisms. The contribution by heterotrophic prokaryotes is supported by observations from winter 2017, where lower ratios of photosynthetic-to-heterotrophic cells were associated with maxima in NH₄⁺ concentrations. These observations imply that the Southern Ocean 27 becomes a biological source of CO₂ to the atmosphere in autumn and winter, not only because nitrate drawdown is weak, but also because the ambient conditions favour net heterotrophy and NH₄⁺ accumulation. High wintertime surface NH4 + concentrations, and the drivers of biological NH4 + cycling, may also have implications for nitrate uptake, through inhibition, and for the air-sea flux of ammonia gas, with the latter influencing the formation of aerosols, clouds, and climate. 2023-03-02T12:00:04Z 2023-03-02T12:00:04Z 2022 2023-02-20T13:07:31Z Master Thesis Masters MSc http://hdl.handle.net/11427/37159 eng application/pdf Department of Oceanography Faculty of Science
spellingShingle Oceanography
Smith, Shantelle
Biogeochemical controls on ammonium accumulation in the surface layer of the TD: Southern Ocean
thesis_degree_str Master's
title Biogeochemical controls on ammonium accumulation in the surface layer of the TD: Southern Ocean
title_full Biogeochemical controls on ammonium accumulation in the surface layer of the TD: Southern Ocean
title_fullStr Biogeochemical controls on ammonium accumulation in the surface layer of the TD: Southern Ocean
title_full_unstemmed Biogeochemical controls on ammonium accumulation in the surface layer of the TD: Southern Ocean
title_short Biogeochemical controls on ammonium accumulation in the surface layer of the TD: Southern Ocean
title_sort biogeochemical controls on ammonium accumulation in the surface layer of the td southern ocean
topic Oceanography
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/37159
work_keys_str_mv AT smithshantelle biogeochemicalcontrolsonammoniumaccumulationinthesurfacelayerofthetdsouthernocean