Evidence for terrigenous dissolved organic nitrogen in the Arctic deep-sea


Contact
tdittmar [ at ] awi-bremerhaven.de

Abstract

In order to trace the fate of terrigenous dissolved organic nitrogen (DON) in the Arctic Ocean, principal component analyses (PCA) was used on a data set of 13 amino acids released via hydrolyses from a total of 110 water samples from Russian rivers, adjacent near-shore locations and the Laptev Sea. The first component of the PCA distinguished significantly between terrigenous DON from the rivers (1.2 +/-0.1) and marine-derived DON in the deep central Arctic Ocean (-1.1 +/-0.2). The significance of this distinction was validated with amino acid data from seawater and river samples from other regions. The second PCA component correlated significantly with the proportion of D-alanine, a tracer for microbial degradation. The percentage of terrigenous DON in the Arctic Ocean was assessed from the first PCA component. The model was calibrated using the rivers (100% terrigenous) and the deep central Arctic Ocean (approximately 0% terrigenous) as endmembers. Terrigenous DON accounted for 28 +/-13% of the total DON on the Laptev Sea shelf, which is in good agreement with independent, lignin-based estimates. High proportions of terrigenous DON (up to 100%) were calculated for the continental slope down to 2000 m water depth and are probably due to downward convection of brine-enriched shelf waters. The model presented here provides the first direct evidence of terrigenous DON in the deep-sea. It may be directly applied to trace the fate of terrigenous DON in other terrestrially dominated marine environments.



Item Type
Article
Authors
Divisions
Programs
Publication Status
Published
Eprint ID
8732
Cite as
Dittmar, T. (2004): Evidence for terrigenous dissolved organic nitrogen in the Arctic deep-sea , Limnology and oceanography, 49 (1), pp. 148-156 .


Share
Add to AnyAdd to TwitterAdd to FacebookAdd to LinkedinAdd to PinterestAdd to Email

Research Platforms
N/A

Campaigns
N/A


Actions
Edit Item Edit Item