4.7 Article

The oceanic biogeochemistry of nickel and its isotopes: New data from the South Atlantic and the Southern Ocean biogeochemical divide

Journal

EARTH AND PLANETARY SCIENCE LETTERS
Volume 535, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.epsl.2020.116118

Keywords

GEOTRACES; nickel isotopes; Southern Ocean biogeochemistry; Antarctic Polar Front

Funding

  1. NERC [D357, JC068, NE/H004475/1]
  2. ETH Zurichand Swiss SNF grant [200020_165904]
  3. NERC [NE/H004475/1] Funding Source: UKRI

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Nickel (Ni) is important for a number of enzymes in oceanic phytoplankton. It has received less attention than some other bioactive metals because it is not reduced to extremely low dissolved concentrations in the photic zone. However, there are strong indications in previous studies that this residual pool is not bio-available. Oceanic Ni isotope data are still scarce, but have great potential for understanding this issue, as well as for understanding the Ni mass balance of the oceans now and in the past. Here, we present new concentration and isotope data for the UK GEOTRACES section at 40 degrees S in the Atlantic (GA10). Nickel concentration data show typical nutrient-like profiles, slightly modified by variable preformed concentrations in sub-surface water masses, e.g. North Atlantic Deep Water. Nickel isotopes, in common with findings in previous studies, are homogeneous beneath 500 m, at about +1.3 parts per thousand in delta Ni-60, in samples with Ni concentrations above 3-3.5 nM. The surface South Atlantic, however, has concentrations below 3 nM, and shows significantly higher delta Ni-60, up to +1.74 parts per thousand, that are closely anti-correlated with Ni concentrations. The data for the deep South Atlantic dissolved pool, with a delta Ni-60 = 1.31 +/- 0.12 parts per thousand (average and 2SD) confirm the homogeneity of the global deep ocean, which previous data demonstrate extends all the way to the surface in the upwelling zone of the Southern Ocean south of the Polar Front. This Ni isotope composition is significantly heavier than known inputs to the oceanic dissolved pool. This mass balance requires an isotopically light sink that may be represented by sedimentary Mn-oxide associated Ni. The magnitude of the isotope fractionation implied by the upper ocean data is not consistent with plausible potential abiotic removal processes. Rather, these data are best explained by biological uptake. However, consideration of the detailed relationships between Ni concentrations and isotope compositions requires that a substantial portion of the oceanic dissolved Ni pool is not bio-available. The data are consistent either with a small preference for the light isotope during uptake (about 0.1 parts per thousand) or two distinct pools of dissolved Ni, one bio-available and one strongly bound in organic complexes, with limited isotopic exchange between them. Patterns of co-variation in Ni concentrations and isotopes with the major nutrients point to strong contrasts across the Polar Front of the Southern Ocean, contrasts that exhibit both similarities and differences with those for the major nutrients and other trace metal micronutrients. South of the Polar Front, Ni is taken up in modest amounts by diatoms, without isotope fractionation. North of the Polar Front the data are most consistent with cyanobacteria as the dominant control on Ni uptake, leading to significant coupled abundance and isotope variation. (C) 2020 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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