4.5 Article

Community respiration/production and bacterial activity in the upper water column of the central Arctic Ocean

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PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/S0967-0637(03)00030-X

Keywords

dissolved oxygen; respiration; production; heterotrophy; bacteria; Arctic Ocean; Canada Basin

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Community metabolism (respiration and production) and bacterial activity were assessed in the upper water column of the central Arctic Ocean during the SHEBA/JOIS ice camp experiment, October 1997-September 1998. In the upper 50 m, decrease in integrated dissolved oxygen (DO) stocks over a period of 124 d in mid-winter suggested a respiration rate of similar to3.3 nM O-2 h(-1) and a carbon demand of similar to4.5 gC m(-2). Increase in 0-50 m integrated stocks of DO during summer implied a net community production of similar to20 gC m(-2). Community respiration rates were directly measured via rate of decrease in DO in whole seawater during 72-h dark incubation experiments. Incubation-based respiration rates were on average 3-fold lower during winter (11.0+/-10.6 nM O-2 h(-1)) compared to summer (35.3+/-24.8 nM O-2 h(-1)). Bacterial heterotrophic activity responded strongly, without noticeable lag, to phytoplankton growth. Rate of leucine incorporation by bacteria (a proxy for protein synthesis and cell growth) increased similar to10-fold, and the cell-specific rate of leucine incorporation similar to5-fold, from winter to summer. Rates of production of bacterial biomass in the upper 50 m were, however, low compared to other oceanic regions, averaging 0.52+/-0.47 ngCl(-1) h(-1) during winter and 5.1+/-3.1 ngC l(-1) h(-1) during summer. Total carbon demand based on respiration experiments averaged 2.4+/-2.3 mgC m(-3) d(-1) in winter and 7.8+/-5.5 mgC m(-3) d(-1) in summer. Estimated bacterial carbon demand based on bacterial productivity and an assumed 10% gross growth efficiency was much lower, averaging about 0.12+/-0.12 mgC m(-3) d(-1) in winter and 1.3+/-0.7 mgC m(-3) d(-1) in summer. Our estimates of bacterial activity during summer were an order of magnitude less than rates reported from a summer 1994 study in the central Arctic Ocean, implying significant inter-annual variability of microbial processes in this region. (C) 2003 Elsevier Science Ltd. All rights reserved.

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