4.8 Article

The significance of nitrification for oceanic new production

Journal

NATURE
Volume 447, Issue 7147, Pages 999-1002

Publisher

NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/nature05885

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Funding

  1. NERC [pml010001, pml010002, soc010008] Funding Source: UKRI
  2. Natural Environment Research Council [soc010008, pml010001, pml010002, NER/O/S/2001/00680, NE/C00387X/1] Funding Source: researchfish

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The flux of organic material sinking to depth is a major control on the inventory of carbon in the ocean(1). To first order, the oceanic system is at equilibrium such that what goes down must come up(2). Because the export flux is difficult to measure directly, it is routinely estimated indirectly by quantifying the amount of phytoplankton growth, or primary production, fuelled by the upward flux of nitrate(3). To do so it is necessary to take into account other sources of biologically available nitrogen. However, the generation of nitrate by nitrification in surface waters has only recently received attention. Here we perform the first synthesis of open-ocean measurements of the specific rate of surface nitrification(4-12) and use these to configure a global biogeochemical model(13,14) to quantify the global role of nitrification. We show that for much of the world ocean a substantial fraction of the nitrate taken up is generated through recent nitrification near the surface. At the global scale, nitrification accounts for about half of the nitrate consumed by growing phytoplankton. A consequence is that many previous attempts to quantify marine carbon export, particularly those based on inappropriate use of the f-ratio ( a measure of the efficiency of the 'biological pump'), are significant overestimates.

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