1367 / 2024-09-25 18:42:13
Biological oxygen production rate enhanced by the Upper Circumpolar Deep Water in the Southern Ocean: estimates from the triple oxygen isotope approach
gross primary productivity,southern ocean,triple oxygen isotope,dissolved oxygen
Session 28 - Towards a Holistic Understanding of the Ocean's Biological Carbon Pump
Abstract Accepted
The Southern Ocean plays a critical role in regulating the global biogeochemical cycle and the atmospheric CO2 level. The influx of CO2 into the deep ocean is enhanced by the biological pump through photosynthesis, which also produces organic matters sinking to the deep ocean for carbon storage on a longer time scale. The primary productivity or biological oxygen production of the Southern Ocean is mainly controlled by the availability of iron. Previous studies observed a decreasing trend of oxygen productions from low latitude to high latitude towards Antarctica. This is caused by the decreasing fluxes of iron from land to the Southern Ocean. In this study, we estimate the net and gross oxygen production rate of the Cosmonaut Sea based on O2/Ar ratios and a triple oxygen isotope approach (δ18O, 17Δ). We analyzed the O2/Ar ratios and triple oxygen isotope compositions of dissolved oxygen collected from the Cosmonaut sea in January, 2021. Averaged net and gross O2 production rate are 12.9 and 133 mmol O2 m-2 day-1, respectively. Not a latitudinal trend, but a longitudinal increasing trend in O2 production rate from west to east was observed. This trend is associated with the strength of the iron-rich Upper Circumpolar Deep Water (UCDW). We identified the UCDW by the maximum temperature of the water column (Tmax) and observed increasing O2 production rate with increasing Tmax. Our observation indicates that the vertical mixing and upwelling of UCDW enhances primary productivity in the Cosmonaut Sea.