Abstract. Recent studies show that stoichiometric elemental ratios of marine ecosystems are not static at Redfield proportions but vary systematically between biomes. However, the wider Atlantic Ocean is undersampled for particulate organic matter (POM) elemental composition, especially when it comes to phosphorus (i.e., POP). Thus, it is uncertain how environmental variation in this region translates into shifts in the C:N:P ratio. To address this, we analyzed hydrography, genomics, and POM concentrations from 877 stations on the meridional transects AMT28 and C13.5, spanning the Atlantic Ocean. We observed nutrient-replete, high-latitude ecosystem C:N:P to be significantly lower than that in the oligotrophic gyres. Latitudinal and zonal differences in elemental stoichiometry were linked to overall nutrient supply as well as N vs. P stress. C:P and N:P were generally higher in the P-stressed northern region compared to Southern Hemisphere regions. We also detected a zonal difference linked to a westward deepening nutricline and a shift from N to P stress. We also evaluated possible seasonal changes in C:N:P across the basin and predicted these to be limited. Overall, this study confirms latitudinal shifts in surface ocean POM ratios but reveals previously unrecognized hemisphere and zonal gradients. This work demonstrates the importance of understanding how regional shifts in hydrography and type of nutrient stress shape the coupling between Atlantic Ocean nutrient and carbon cycles.
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Linking a Latitudinal Gradient in Ocean Hydrography and Elemental Stoichiometry in the Eastern Pacific Ocean
Abstract A past global synthesis of marine particulate organic matter (POM) suggested latitudinal variation in the ratio of surface carbon (C): nitrogen (N): phosphorus (P). However, this synthesis relied on compiled datasets that may have biased the observed pattern. To demonstrate latitudinal shifts in surface C:N:P, we combined hydrographic and POM observations from 28°N to 69°S in the eastern Pacific Ocean (GO‐SHIP line P18). Both POM concentrations and ratios displayed distinct biome‐associated changes. Surface POM concentrations were relatively low in the North Pacific subtropical gyre, increased through the Equatorial Pacific, were lowest in the South Pacific subtropical gyre, and increased through the Southern Ocean. Stoichiometric elemental ratios were systematically above Redfield proportions in warmer regions. However, C:P and N:P gradually decreased across the Southern Ocean despite an abundance of macro‐nutrients. Here, a size‐fraction analysis of POM linked increases in the proportion of large plankton to declining ratios. Subsurface N* values support the hypothesis that accumulated remineralization products of low C:P and N:P exported POM helps maintain the Redfield Ratio of deep nutrients. We finally evaluated stoichiometric models against observations to assess predictive accuracy. We attributed the failure of all models to their inability to capture shifts in the specific nature of nutrient limitation. Our results point to more complex linkages between multinutrient limitation and cellular resource allocation than currently parameterized in models. These results suggest a greater importance of understanding the interaction between the type of nutrient limitation and plankton diversity for predicting the global variation in surface C:N:P.
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- PAR ID:
- 10374523
- Publisher / Repository:
- DOI PREFIX: 10.1029
- Date Published:
- Journal Name:
- Global Biogeochemical Cycles
- Volume:
- 35
- Issue:
- 5
- ISSN:
- 0886-6236
- Format(s):
- Medium: X
- Sponsoring Org:
- National Science Foundation
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