You're currently viewing an old version of this dataset. To see the current version, click here.

Biogeochemistry of sediments in the Aegean Sea

Biochemical composition of sedimentary organic matter (OM), vertical fluxes and bacterial distribution were studied at 15 stations (95-2270 m depth) in the Aegean Sea during spring and summer. Downward fluxes of labile OM were significantly higher in the northern than in the southern part and were higher in summer than in spring. Primary inputs of OM were not related to sedimentary OM concentrations, which had highest values in summer. Sedimentary chlorophyll-a concentrations were similar in the northern and southern parts. Carbohydrates, the main component of sedimentary OM, were about 1.2 times higher in the southern part than in the northern, without significant temporal changes. Total proteins were higher in summer and about double in the northern part. Sedimentary proteins appeared more dependent upon the downward flux of phytopigment than of proteins. Sedimentary OM was characterised by a relatively large fraction of soluble compounds and showed better quality in the northern part. The lack of a depth-related pattern in sedimentary OM and the similar concentrations in the two areas suggest that differences in sedimentary OM quality in the Aegean basin are dependent on system productivity; the bulk of sedimentary OM is largely conservative. Sedimentary bacterial density was about double in the northern part and higher in spring than in summer, but bacterial size was about three times higher in summer, resulting in a larger bacterial biomass in summer. Bacterial density was coupled with total and protein fluxes, indicating a rapid bacterial response to pelagic production. Bacterial biomass was significantly correlated with sedimentary protein and phytopigment concentrations, indicating a clear response to accumulation of labile OM in the sediments. In all cases bacteria accounted for <5% of the organic C and N pools. The efficiency of benthic bacteria in exploiting protein pools, estimated as amounts of protein available per unit bacterial biomass, indicates a constant ratio of about 70 µg proteins/µg C. This suggests a similar bacterial efficiency all over the area studied, unaffected by different trophic conditions.

Data and Resources

This dataset has no data

Cite this as

Danovaro, Roberto, Marrale, Daniela, Della Croce, Norberto, Parodi, P, Fabiano, Mauro (1999). Dataset: Biogeochemistry of sediments in the Aegean Sea. https://doi.org/10.1594/PANGAEA.759918

DOI retrieved: 1999

Additional Info

Field Value
Imported on November 29, 2024
Last update November 29, 2024
License CC-BY-3.0
Source https://doi.org/10.1594/PANGAEA.759918
Author Danovaro, Roberto
Given Name Roberto
Family Name Danovaro
More Authors
Marrale, Daniela
Della Croce, Norberto
Parodi, P
Fabiano, Mauro
Source Creation 1999
Publication Year 1999
Resource Type application/zip - filename: Danovaro_1999
Subject Areas
Name: Biosphere

Name: Oceans

Related Identifiers
Title: Biochemical composition of sedimentary organic matter and bacterial distribution in the Aegean Sea: Trophic state and pelagic-benthic coupling
Identifier: https://doi.org/10.1016/S1385-1101(99)00024-6
Type: DOI
Relation: IsSupplementTo
Year: 1999
Source: Journal of Sea Research
Authors: Danovaro Roberto , Marrale Daniela , Della Croce Norberto , Parodi P , Fabiano Mauro .