Particulate organic carbon and nitrogen concentrations and fluxes at time series station DYNAPROC

Sinking particles were collected every 4 h with drifting sediment traps deployed at 200 m depth in May 1995 in a 1-D vertical system during the DYNAPROC observations in the northwestern Mediterranean sea. POC, proteins, glucosamine and lipid classes were used as indicators of the intensity and quality of the particle flux. The roles of day/night cycle and wind on the particle flux were examined. The transient regime of production from late spring bloom to pre-oligotrophy determined the flux intensity and quality. POC fluxes decreased from, on average, 34 to 11 mg/m**2/d, representing 6-14% of the primary production under late spring bloom conditions to 1-2% under pre-oligotrophic conditions. Total protein and chloroplast lipid fluxes correlated with POC and reflected the input of algal biomass into the traps. As the season proceeded, changes in the biochemical composition of the exported material were observed. The C/N ratio rose from 7.8 to 12. Increases of serine (10-28% of total proteins), total lipids (7-9 to 14-28% of POC) and reserve lipids (1-5 to 5-22% of total lipids) were noticeable, whereas total protein content in POC decreased (20-27 to 18-7%). N-acetyl glucosamine, a tracer of fecal pellet flux, showed that zooplankton grazing was a major vector of downward export during the decaying bloom. Against this background pattern, episodic events specifically increased the flux, modifying the quality and the settling velocity of particles. Day/night signals in biotracers (POC, N-acetyl glucosamine, protein and chloroplast lipids) showed that zooplankton migrations were responsible for sedimentation of fresh material through fast sinking particles (V=170-180 m/d) at night. Periodic signatures of re-processed material (high lipolysis and bacterial biomass indices) suggested that other zooplankton fecal pellets or small aggregates, probably of lower settling velocities (V=600 m/d) likely related to large aggregate formation. A wind event increased biotracer fluxes (POC, protein, chloroplast lipids). The rapid transmission of surface signals through extremely fast sinking particles could be a general feature of particle fluxes in marine areas unaffected by horizontal advection.

Data and Resources

This dataset has no data

Cite this as

Goutx, Madeleine, Momzikoff, André, Striby, L, Andersen, Valérie, Marty, Jean-Claude, Vescovali, Isabelle (2000). Dataset: Particulate organic carbon and nitrogen concentrations and fluxes at time series station DYNAPROC. https://doi.org/10.1594/PANGAEA.738702

DOI retrieved: 2000

Additional Info

Field Value
Imported on November 30, 2024
Last update November 30, 2024
License CC-BY-3.0
Source https://doi.org/10.1594/PANGAEA.738702
Author Goutx, Madeleine
Given Name Madeleine
Family Name Goutx
More Authors
Momzikoff, André
Striby, L
Andersen, Valérie
Marty, Jean-Claude
Vescovali, Isabelle
Source Creation 2000
Publication Year 2000
Resource Type application/zip - filename: Goutx_2000
Subject Areas
Name: Oceans

Related Identifiers
Title: High-frequency fluxes of labile compounds in the central Ligurian Sea, northwestern Mediterranean
Identifier: https://doi.org/10.1016/S0967-0637(99)00101-6
Type: DOI
Relation: IsSupplementTo
Year: 2000
Source: Deep Sea Research Part I: Oceanographic Research Papers
Authors: Goutx Madeleine , Momzikoff André , Striby L , Andersen Valérie , Marty Jean-Claude , Vescovali Isabelle .