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Lecture 11: Ocean Primary Production and Biogeochemical Controls

Lecture 11: Ocean Primary Production and Biogeochemical Controls. Oceanic ecosystem largely depends on the biochemical process of phytoplankton. Learning Objectives. Understand the trophic dynamics in the ocean Know the marine productivity and its global distribution

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Lecture 11: Ocean Primary Production and Biogeochemical Controls

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  1. Lecture 11: Ocean Primary Production and Biogeochemical Controls Oceanic ecosystem largely depends on the biochemical process of phytoplankton

  2. Learning Objectives • Understand the trophicdynamics in the ocean • Know the marine productivity and its global distribution • Biological productivity in the upwelling water

  3. ENERGY Autotrophs: organisms capable of self-nourishment by synthesizing food from inorganic nutrients heterotrophs: organisms not belonging to autotrophs; all animals are heterotrophs c.f. Fig.10-1 in text

  4. Difference between Mass (i.e. chemicals) Transfer and energy path

  5. Difference between Mass Transfer and energy path

  6. Difference between Mass Transfer and energy path Mass transfer is recycling (self-contained)

  7. Difference between Mass Transfer and energy path Physiologic processes Energy is replenished all the time

  8. Trophic levels and dynamics Although simple, it reminds us that all of the energy that a species expends relies on the photosynthesis of plants Simple food chain Trophic dynamics: study the interrelationships among organisms by means of the nutrition flow in the ecosystem The first trophic level is the autotroph, i.e. the plant producer, providing the matter and energy to the higher trophic levels, i.e. consumers

  9. Omnivore: both plant and animal eater Food Web: a network of interlaced and interdependent food chains grazing food chain phytoplankton → zooplankton → nekton detritus → deposit feeder → nekton detritus food chain

  10. Higher order trophic levels depend on the lower order trophic levels Energy amount increases Size increases biomass increases Energy pyramid Where does the energy go?

  11. Energy transfer between trophic levels is not efficient Typically, a positive correlation exists between body size of aqua animals and their trophic level simple rule Exceptions?

  12. Five basic consuming types of aqua animals (Fig.10-3 in text) • Grazer − herbivores (e.g. sea urchin) • Predator − carnivores (e.g. shark) • Scavenger − benthic invertebrates (e.g. crab) • Filter feeder − animals living in burrows • Deposit feeder − animals living in sediments Dynamical time lag exists between the food abundance and animal population

  13. Sunlight and nutrition supplies are two principal factors that limit the primary production in the ocean. Trophic levels and dynamics Food Web In addition to forming carbohydrates (via photosynthesis), plantsalso manufacture other organic compounds, including proteins, lipids, and nucleic acids such as DNA and RNA. Energy

  14. Plankton blooms Cell division causes diatom populations to increase dramatically and rapidly (within several days) under preferable growth conditions Redtide

  15. Plankton Blooms Bands of the dionflagellate Lingulodinium polyedrum moving onshore over the troughs of a series of internal waves

  16. Nonlinear Internal Waves and Phytoplankton Isopycnals Have you noted how fast the time lapse is !

  17. Alaska green tide

  18. Large scale Eddies 200 km

  19. Note that where do the blooms occur!

  20. Surface CHL-A 1) Central Gyres 2) Upwelling Regions

  21. Production of Organic Carbon Export

  22. Why do we care about theCarbon Export Production? • The total amount of carbon in the ocean is about 50 times greater than the amount in the atmosphere, and is exchanged with the atmosphere on a time-scale of several hundred years. • At least 50% of the oxygen we breathe comes from the photosynthesis of marine plants. • Currently, 48% of the carbon emitted to the atmosphere by fossil fuel burning is sequestered into the ocean. • But the future fate of this important carbon sink is largely uncertain (therefore anxious) because of potential climate changeimpacts on ocean circulation, biogeochemical cycling, and ecosystem dynamics => Definition of primary productivity in the ocean

  23. Roles of bacterial in theecosystem • Bacterial decompose dead tissue and release essential inorganic nutrients into the water for recycling by plants. • *NH3 + 2O2→ H+ + NO3- +H2O (aerobic bacterial) • *SO42-→ 2O2 + S2- (anaerobic bacterial) • Plays both the starting point (providing nutrients for plant photosynthesis) and the ending point (proceeding the decay of organic matter) of the food cycle that provides the linkage between nonliving and living matter. • Also serve as food for some species of zooplankton

  24. 2H+ + S2-→ H2S

  25. Cyanobacteria (blue-green algae) are predominantly photosynthetic prokaryotic (初核質) organisms containing a blue pigment in addition to chlorophyll. They use sunlight directly to manufacture food from dissolved nutrients.

  26. Hydrothermal vents and Chemosynthetic bacteria Chemical energy released by the oxidation of inorganic compounds is used to produce food. The base of vent community is occupied by microbes rather than by plants, because there is no light in the deep sea.

  27. Global Carbon Cycle Marine Biota Export Production inside the ocean

  28. What are the controllers on Export Production? (1) Nutrient Sources for Primary Production and (2) limitations of CO2 fluxes The fluxed of organic carbon must be sustained by an adequate flux of macronutrients (P, N, Si) If macronutrients are unavailable then the CO2 flux is reduced! Macronutrients vs. micronutrients (p339 in text)

  29. What are the controllers on Export Production? • Ocean nutrient inventory • 2) Utilization of nutrients in HNLCcondition • 3) Change of Redfield Ratio (A. C. Redfield 1958;1963)

  30. What are the controllers on Export Production? • Ocean nutrient inventory Nitrogen appears to be the most important controlling factor that limit the primary productivity of ecosystems. • Why ? (important; p339 in text) • N is an essential nutrient for all living organisms (nucleic acids and amino acids) • N has many oxidation states, which makes speciation and redox chemistry very interesting • NH4+ is the preferred N nutrient

  31. Fixation N2 Nitrification Mineralization NH4 NO3 Uptake Phytoplankton Grazing Mix Layer depth Chlorophyll Zooplankton Mortality Large detritus Water column Susp. particles Continental shelf sediments are responsible for up to 67% of marine N denitrification estimates Nitrification N2 NH4 NO3 De-nitrification Aerobic mineralization Organic matter Sediment De-nitrification − the removal of fixed N, mostly NO3-, resulting in the formation of nonbiologically available N, primarily N2 gas

  32. What are the controllers on Export Production? 2) Utilization of nutrients in HNLC

  33. HNLC − High-Nutrient, Low-Chlorophyll • It describe areas of the ocean where the number of phytoplankton are low in spite of high macronutrient concentrations (nitrate, phosphate, silica acid). • HNLC is thought to be caused by the scarcity of iron (a micronutrient which phytoplankton require for photosynthesis) and high grazing rates of micro-zooplankton that feed on the phytoplankton. • The HNLC condition has been observed in the equatorial and sub-arctic Pacific Ocean, the Southern Ocean, and in strong upwelling regimes, such as off central and northern California and off Peru.

  34. Southern Ocean HNLC

  35. Southern Ocean HNLC • Nitrate and phosphate concentrations are high year round but standing stocks of phytoplankton are always low (0.2-0.4 µg/L; normal yield is 1 µg /L) • Iron concentrations in these waters are sub-nanomolar: the same as those that are known to limit growth of phytoplankton, particularly large species such as diatoms. • Addition of low levels of Fe promotes growth of large phytoplankton. • -bottle experiments • -in situ fertilization experiments

  36. One of the possible solutions to global warming is to fertilize HNLC ocean areas lacking iron with iron to increase CO2 absorption from phytoplankton.

  37. Redfield ratio (stoichiometry) − the molecular ratio of carbon, nitrogen and phosphorus in phytoplankton. • Redfield (1963) described the remarkable congruence between the chemistry of the deep ocean and the chemistry of living things in the surface ocean (i.e. phytoplankton). Both have N:P ratios of about 16. • When nutrients are not limiting, the molar element ratio C:N:P in most phytoplankton is 116:16:1. • Redfield thought it wasn't purely coincidental that the vast oceans would have a chemistry perfectly suited to the requirements of living organisms. • He considered how the cycles of not just N and P but also C and O could interact to result in this match.

  38. Modern Time N2 fixation De-nitrification N = 25790 N* = N – 16 P

  39. Biologically Mediated Exchange of CO2 Between the Ocean and Atmosphere

  40. Regions with upwelling represent the productivity Equatorial upwelling Coastal upwelling Water turbidity

  41. oceanterrestrial area Open ocean deserts continental shelves forest; grassland upwelling regions rain forests shallow estuaries farmlands

  42. Both physical and biological processes in the ocean affect the carbon cycle. In addition, physical processes influence the net production of biological oceanography.

  43. HW#7 due on 6 June of class time

  44. HW#7 due on 6 June of class time d) e)

  45. HW#7 due on 6 June of class time Question 3:

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