Oxygen Utilization and Downward Carbon Flux in an Oxygen-Depleted Eddy in the Eastern Tropical North Atlantic

The occurrence of mesoscale eddies that develop suboxic environments at shallow depth (about 40-100 m) has recently been reported for the eastern tropical North Atlantic (ETNA). Their hydrographic structure suggests that the water mass inside the eddy is well isolated from ambient waters supporting the development of severe near-surface oxygen deficits. So far, hydrographic and biogeochemical characterization of these eddies was limited to a few autonomous surveys, with the use of moorings, under water gliders and profiling floats. In this study we present results from the first dedicated biogeochemical survey of one of these eddies conducted in March 2014 near the Cape Verde Ocean Observatory (CVOO). During the survey the eddy core showed oxygen concentrations as low as 5 µmol kg-1 with a pH of around 7.6 at approximately 100 m depth. Correspondingly, the aragonite saturation level dropped to 1 at the same depth, thereby creating unfavorable conditions for calcifying organisms. To our knowledge, such enhanced acidity within near-surface waters has never been reported before for the open Atlantic Ocean. Vertical distributions of particulate organic matter and dissolved organic matter (POM and DOM), generally showed elevated concentrations in the surface mixed layer (0-70 m), with DOM also accumulating beneath the oxygen minimum. With the use of reference data from the upwelling region where these eddies are formed, the oxygen utilization rate was calculated by determining oxygen consumption through the remineralization of organic matter. Inside the core, we found these rates were almost 1 order of magnitude higher (apparent oxygen utilization rate (aOUR); 0.26 µmol kg-1 day-1) than typical values for the open North Atlantic. Computed downward fluxes for particulate organic carbon (POC), were around 0.19 to 0.23 g C m-2 day-1 at 100 m depth, clearly exceeding fluxes typical for an oligotrophic open-ocean setting. The observations support the view that the oxygen-depleted eddies can be viewed as isolated, westwards propagating upwelling systems of their own, thereby represent re-occurring alien biogeochemical environments in the ETNA.

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Cite this as

Fiedler, Björn, Grundle, Damian, Schütte, Florian, Karstensen, Johannes, Löscher, Carolin R, Hauss, Helena, Wagner, Hannes, Loginova, Alexandra, Kiko, Rainer, Silva, P, Tanhua, Toste, Körtzinger, Arne (2016). Dataset: Oxygen Utilization and Downward Carbon Flux in an Oxygen-Depleted Eddy in the Eastern Tropical North Atlantic. https://doi.org/10.1594/PANGAEA.865177

DOI retrieved: 2016

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.865177
Author Fiedler, Björn
Given Name Björn
Family Name Fiedler
More Authors
Grundle, Damian
Schütte, Florian
Karstensen, Johannes
Löscher, Carolin R
Hauss, Helena
Wagner, Hannes
Loginova, Alexandra
Kiko, Rainer
Silva, P
Tanhua, Toste
Körtzinger, Arne
Source Creation 2016
Publication Year 2016
Resource Type application/zip - filename: Fiedler_2016
Subject Areas
Name: Ecology

Name: Lithosphere

Related Identifiers
Title: Oxygen utilization and downward carbon flux in an oxygen-depleted eddy in the eastern tropical North Atlantic
Identifier: https://doi.org/10.5194/bg-13-5633-2016
Type: DOI
Relation: IsSupplementTo
Year: 2016
Source: Biogeosciences
Authors: Fiedler Björn , Grundle Damian , Schütte Florian , Karstensen Johannes , Löscher Carolin R , Hauss Helena , Wagner Hannes , Loginova Alexandra , Kiko Rainer , Silva Pericles , Tanhua Toste , Körtzinger Arne .

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Type: DOI
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