4.7 Article

Global trends in marine nitrate N isotopes from observations and a neural network-based climatology

Journal

BIOGEOSCIENCES
Volume 16, Issue 13, Pages 2617-2633

Publisher

COPERNICUS GESELLSCHAFT MBH
DOI: 10.5194/bg-16-2617-2019

Keywords

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Funding

  1. NSF [OCE-1658392]

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Nitrate is a critical ingredient for life in the ocean because, as the most abundant form of fixed nitrogen in the ocean, it is an essential nutrient for primary production. The availability of marine nitrate is principally determined by biological processes, each having a distinct influence on the N isotopic composition of nitrate (nitrate delta N-15) - a property that informs much of our understanding of the marine N cycle as well as marine ecology, fisheries, and past ocean conditions. However, the sparse spatial distribution of nitrate delta N-15 observations makes it difficult to apply this useful property in global studies or to facilitate robust model-data comparisons. Here, we use a compilation of published nitrate delta N-15 measurements (n = 12277) and climatological maps of physical and biogeochemical tracers to create a surface-to-seafloor, 1 degrees resolution map of nitrate delta N-15 using an ensemble of artificial neural networks (EANN). The strong correlation (R-2 > 0.87) and small mean difference (< 0.05 %) between EANN-estimated and observed nitrate delta N-15 indicate that the EANN provides a good estimate of climatological nitrate delta N-15 without a significant bias. The magnitude of observation-model residuals is consistent with the magnitude of seasonal to interannual changes in observed nitrate delta N-15 that are not captured by our climatological model. The EANN provides a globally resolved map of mean nitrate delta N-15 for observational and modeling studies of marine biogeochemistry, paleoceanography, and marine ecology.

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