4.8 Article

New Perspectives on the Marine Carbon Cycle-The Marine Dissolved Organic Matter Reactivity Continuum

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY
Volume 56, Issue 9, Pages 5371-5380

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.est.1c08871

Keywords

marine DOM; organic tracers; reactivity continuum; kinetic model

Funding

  1. National Science Foundation [1829888, 0825403, 1635618]
  2. Division Of Ocean Sciences
  3. Directorate For Geosciences [1829888, 1635618, 0825403] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

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This perspective challenges our current understanding of the marine carbon cycle and proposes the adoption of a carbon reactivity continuum concept for the oceans using kinetic data. More knowledge is needed regarding surface water DOM concentrations and reactivity, carbon pump efficiency, and autotrophic communities.
This perspective challenges our current understanding of the marine carbon cycle, including an alternative explanation of bulk 14C-DOM measurements. We propose the adoption of the carbon reactivity continuum concept previously established for lakes and sediments for the oceans using kinetic data and term this the marine DOM reactivity continuum. We need to gain a fundamental understanding of the biogeochemical drivers of surface water DOM concentrations and reactivity, biological carbon pump efficiency, and the autotrophic communities that are the ultimate but variable sources of marine DOM. This perspective is intended to shift our focus to a more inclusive kinetic model and may lead us to a more accurate assessment of the active and dynamic role marine DOM plays in the global carbon cycle. Currently, the kinetic data to establish and validate such a marine DOM reactivity continuum model are still lacking, and their resolution depends on the discovery of new organic tracers that span large differences in reactivity and microbial degradation rates. We may need to refocus our efforts in deciphering the structure and reactivity of marine organic molecules in a kinetic context, including the microbial and physicochemical constraints on molecular reactivity that are present in the deep ocean.

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