488 / 2024-09-18 01:25:14
Distribution and cycling of siderophores in the North and Tropical East Pacific Oceans
Siderophores,Fe,LC-MS
Session 10 - The biogeochemistry of trace metals in a changing ocean
Abstract Accepted
Jingxuan Li / Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution
Lydia Babcock-Adams / Florida State University
Matthew McIlvin / Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution
Daniel Repeta / Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution
Most iron (Fe) dissolved in seawater is complexed to organic ligands of unknown composition.  Here we investigate the distribution of siderophores, small organic compounds synthesized by microbes to bind environmental Fe and facilitate its transport into the cell.  Siderophores help relieve Fe-stress and enhance microbial production under Fe-deficient conditions.  Siderophores were measured at all stations sampled across a section of the Pacific Ocean visited by the GEOTRACES GP15 expedition. In the chronically Fe-limited subpolar gyre, Fe-marinobactin and Fe-amphibactin siderophore concentrations reached 66 pM and accounted for up to 80% of dissolved Fe. Ferrioxamine/ferrichrome-like siderophores, including ferricrocin, were abundant near the Alaskan coast. Metal-free and Al-siderophores were also abundant across the section indicating rapid and active Fe-siderophore uptake.  Fe-acquisition via siderophores is a common strategy for microbes inhabiting the upper ocean and likely supplies a large fraction of bioavailable-Fe in Fe-deficient regions.