4.8 Article

Impact of glacial/interglacial sea level change on the ocean nitrogen cycle

出版社

NATL ACAD SCIENCES
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1701315114

关键词

denitrification; nitrogen fixation; nitrogen isotopes; glacial cycles

资金

  1. Taiwan Ministry of Science and Technology (MOST) [105-2628-M-002-007-MY3]
  2. National Taiwan University [NTU-CESRP-106R7625-1]
  3. MOST [NSC 101-2611-M-001-003-MY3]
  4. Sustainability Science Research Program of the Academia Sinica
  5. US National Science Foundation [OCE-1060947, PLR-1401489]
  6. Grand Challenges Program of Princeton University

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The continental shelves are themost biologically dynamic regions of the ocean, and they are extensive worldwide, especially in the western North Pacific. Their area has varied dramatically over the glacial/interglacial cycles of the last million years, but the effects of this variation on ocean biological and chemical processes remain poorly understood. Conversion of nitrate to N2 by denitrification in sediments accounts for half or more of the removal of biologically available nitrogen (fixed N) from the ocean. The emergence of continental shelves during ice ages and their flooding during interglacials have been hypothesized to drive changes in sedimentary denitrification. Denitrification leads to the occurrence of phosphorus-bearing, N-depleted surface waters, which encourages N2 fixation, the dominant N input to the ocean. An 860,000-y record of foraminifera shell-bound N isotopes from the South China Sea indicates that N2 fixation covaried with sea level. The N2 fixation changes are best explained as a response to changes in regional excess phosphorus supply due to sea level-driven variations in shallow sediment denitrification associated with the cyclic drowning and emergence of the continental shelves. This hypothesis is consistent with a glacial ocean that hosted globally lower rates of fixed N input and loss and a longer residence time for oceanic fixed N-a sluggish ocean N budget during ice ages. In addition, this work provides a clear sign of sea level-driven glacial/interglacial oscillations in biogeochemical fluxes at and near the ocean margins, with implications for coastal organisms and ecosystems.

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