4.7 Article

Physical Controls on the Macrofaunal Benthic Biomass in Barrow Canyon, Chukchi Sea

Journal

JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH-OCEANS
Volume 126, Issue 5, Pages -

Publisher

AMER GEOPHYSICAL UNION
DOI: 10.1029/2020JC017091

Keywords

Barrow Canyon; benthic fauna; Chukchi Sea; dynamics

Categories

Funding

  1. National Science Foundation [PLR-1504333, OPP-1733564, OPP-1822334, PLR-1304563, OPP-1204082, OPP-1702456]
  2. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration [NA14OAR4320158, NA19OAR4320074, CINAR-22309.02]

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Through shipboard data and dynamical equations, a benthic hotspot with exceptionally high macrofaunal biomass in Barrow Canyon is explained, which is associated with strong northward flow and sharp density front in the canyon.
A region of exceptionally high macrofaunal benthic biomass exists in Barrow Canyon, implying a carbon export process that is locally concentrated. Here we offer an explanation for this benthic hotspot using shipboard data together with a set of dynamical equations. Repeat occupations of the Distributed Biological Observatory transect in Barrow Canyon reveal that when the northward flow is strong and the density front in the canyon is sharp, plumes of fluorescence and oxygen extend from the pycnocline to the seafloor in the vicinity of the hotspot. By solving the quasi-geostrophic omega equation with an analytical flow field fashioned after the observations, we diagnose the vertical velocity in the canyon. This reveals that, as the along stream flow converges into the canyon, it drives a secondary circulation cell with strong downwelling on the cyclonic side of the northward flow. The downwelling quickly advects material from the pycnocline to the seafloor in a vertical plume analogous to those seen in the observations. The plume occurs only when the phytoplankton reside in the pycnocline, since the near-surface vertical velocity is weak, also consistent with the observations. Using a wind-based proxy to represent the strength of the northward flow and hence the pumping, in conjunction with a satellite-derived phytoplankton source function, we construct a time series of carbon supply to the bottom of Barrow Canyon.

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