4.3 Article

Spatial patterns of plankton biomass and stable isotopes reflect the influence of the nitrogen-fixer Trichodesmium along the subtropical North Atlantic

Journal

JOURNAL OF PLANKTON RESEARCH
Volume 35, Issue 3, Pages 513-525

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/plankt/fbt011

Keywords

stable isotopes; plankton; Subtropical North Atlantic; Trichodesmium

Funding

  1. project Malaspina [CSD2008-00077]
  2. program CONSOLIDER-INGENIO of the Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovacion (Spain)
  3. project EURO-BASIN of the EU [FP7-ENV-2010 264933]
  4. Instituto Espanol de Oceanografia (IEO)
  5. PFPI grant of IEO

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The spatial variability of biomass and stable isotopes in plankton size fractions in the upper 200 m was studied in a high spatial resolution transect along 24N from the Canary Islands to Florida to determine nitrogen and carbon sources. Vertical advection of waters predominated in lateral zones, while the central Atlantic (3070W) was characterized by strong stratification and oligotrophic surface waters. Plankton biomass was low in the central zone and high on both the eastern and the western sides, with most of the variability due to either large (2000 m) or small plankton (500 m). Carbon isotopes reflected mainly the advection the deep water in lateral zones. Stable nitrogen isotopes showed a nearly symmetrical spatial distribution in all fractions, with the lowest values (N-15 1) in the central zone, and were inversely correlated with carbon stable isotopes (C-13) and with the abundance of the nitrogen-fixer Trichodesmium. Diazotrophy was estimated to account for 50 of organic nitrogen in the central zone, and even 30 in the eastern and the western zones. The impact of diazotrophy increased with the size of the organisms, supporting the wide participation of all trophic levels in the processing of recently fixed nitrogen. These results indicate that atmospheric sources of carbon and nitrogen prevail over deep water sources in the subtropical North Atlantic and that the zone influenced by diazotrophy is much larger than reported in previous studies.

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