Particle microenvironments expand the niche of anaerobic metabolism in the ocean

In ocean waters, anaerobic microbial respiration should be confined to the anoxic waters found in coastal regions and tropical oxygen minimum zones, where it is energetically favourable. However, recent molecular and geochemical evidence has pointed to a much broader distribution of denitrifying and sulfate-reducing microbes. Anaerobic metabolisms are thought to thrive in microenvironments that develop inside sinking organic aggregates, but the global distribution and geochemical significance of these microenvironments is poorly understood. Here, we develop a new size-resolved particle model to predict anaerobic respiration from aggregate properties and seawater chemistry. Constrained by observations of the size spectrum of sinking particles, the model predicts that denitrification and sulfate reduction can be sustained throughout vast, hypoxic expanses of the ocean, and could explain the trace metal enrichment observed in particles due to sulfide precipitation. Globally, the expansion of the anaerobic niche due to particle microenvironments doubles the rate of water column denitrification compared with estimates based on anoxic zones alone, and changes the sensitivity of the marine nitrogen cycle to deoxygenation in a warming climate.

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Cite this as

Bianchi, Daniele, Weber, Thomas, Kiko, Rainer, Deutsch, Curtis (2018). Dataset: Particle microenvironments expand the niche of anaerobic metabolism in the ocean. https://doi.org/10.1594/PANGAEA.885760

DOI retrieved: 2018

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.885760
Author Bianchi, Daniele
Given Name Daniele
Family Name Bianchi
More Authors
Weber, Thomas
Kiko, Rainer
Deutsch, Curtis
Source Creation 2018
Publication Year 2018
Resource Type application/zip - filename: bianchi-etal_2018
Subject Areas
Name: Lithosphere

Related Identifiers
Title: Global niche of marine anaerobic metabolisms expanded by particle microenvironments
Identifier: https://doi.org/10.1038/s41561-018-0081-0
Type: DOI
Relation: IsSupplementTo
Year: 2018
Source: Nature Geoscience
Authors: Bianchi Daniele , Weber Thomas , Kiko Rainer , Deutsch Curtis .