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Abstract Mercury (Hg) is a bioaccumulative neurotoxin that can concentrate to potentially harmful levels in higher levels of marine food webs following conversion to methylmercury (MeHg). This is of public health concern as seafood is a main protein source for many in the Pacific region. To better understand Hg partitioning and transformations in the Pacific Ocean, Hg species and phases were measured along a meridional section from Alaska to Tahiti in 2018. This allowed the description of Hg concentrations and speciation under a variety of biogeochemical conditions such as the Alaskan shelf, the oligotrophic North Pacific gyre, and near the hydrothermally active Loihi seamount. Filtered HgT concentrations were elevated below 1,000 m near the Loihi Seamount with an average concentration of 1.45 pM, possibly indicating enrichment from hydrothermal venting. Filtered MeHg concentrations were notably higher at depth at the equator and generally lower south of the equator. Total Hg in suspended particles was greatest in the upper 1,000 m near the Alaskan Shelf and decreased in concentration southward. Suspended particle MeHg was greatest in the surface ocean in the upper 300 m near the Intertropical Convergence Zone (ITCZ). For both HgT and MeHg, particle‐associated concentrations appear to be related to organic fraction, and concentrations decreased southward. In general, all measured Hg species had greater concentrations in the northern than southern Pacific Ocean consistent with prior measurements.more » « lessFree, publicly-accessible full text available April 1, 2026
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Biological nitrogen fixation is a key driver of global primary production and climate. Decades of effort have repeatedly updated nitrogen fixation estimates for terrestrial and open ocean systems, yet other aquatic systems in between have largely been ignored. Here we present an evaluation of nitrogen fixation for inland and coastal waters. We demonstrate that water column and sediment nitrogen fixation is ubiquitous across these diverse aquatic habitats, with rates ranging six orders of magnitude. We conservatively estimate that, despite accounting for less than 10% of the global surface area, inland and coastal aquatic systems fix 40 (30 to 54) teragrams of nitrogen per year, equivalent to 15% of the nitrogen fixed on land and in the open ocean. Inland systems contribute more than half of this biological nitrogen fixation.more » « lessFree, publicly-accessible full text available June 12, 2026
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Biological nitrogen fixation is the conversion of dinitrogen (N2) gas into bioavailable nitrogen by microorganisms with consequences for primary production, ecosystem function, and global climate. Here we present a compiled dataset of 4793 nitrogen fixation (N2-fixation) rates measured in the water column and benthos of inland and coastal systems via the acetylene reduction assay, 15N2 labeling, or N2/Ar technique. While the data are distributed across seven continents, most observations (88%) are from the northern hemisphere. 15N2 labeling accounted for 67% of water column measurements, while the acetylene reduction assay accounted for 81% of benthic N2-fixation observations. Dataset median area-, volume-, and mass-normalized N2-fixation rates are 7.1 μmol N2-N m−2 h−1, 2.3 × 10−4 μmol N2-N L−1 h−1, and 4.8 × 10−4 μmol N2-N g−1 h−1, respectively. This dataset will facilitate future efforts to study and scale N2-fixation contributions across inland and coastal aquatic environments.more » « lessFree, publicly-accessible full text available January 23, 2026
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Methylmercury (MeHg) is a neurotoxin that bioaccumulates to potentially harmful concentrations in Arctic and Subarctic marine predators and those that consume them. Monitoring and modeling MeHg bioaccumulation and biogeochemical cycling in the ocean requires an understanding of the mechanisms behind net mercury (Hg) methylation. The key functional gene pair for Hg methylation,hgcAB, is widely distributed throughout ocean basins and spans multiple microbial phyla. While multiple microbially mediated anaerobic pathways for Hg methylation in the ocean are known, the majority ofhgcAhomologs have been found in oxic subsurface waters, in contrast to other ecosystems. In particular, microaerophilicNitrospina, a genera of nitrite-oxidizing bacteria containing ahgcA-like sequence, have been proposed as a potentially important Hg methylator in the upper ocean. The objective of this work was therefore to examine the potential of nitrifiers as Hg methylators and quantify total Hg and MeHg across three Arctic and Subarctic seas (the Gulf of Alaska, the Bering Sea and the Chukchi Sea) in regions whereNitrospinaare likely present. In Spring 2021, samples for Hg analysis were obtained with a trace metal clean rosette across these seas. Mercury methylation rates were quantified in concert with nitrification rates using onboard incubation experiments with additions of stable isotope-labeled Hg and NH4+. A significant correlation between Hg methylation and nitrification was observed across all sites (R2= 0.34,p< 0.05), with the strongest correlation in the Chukchi Sea (R2= 0.99,p< 0.001).Nitrospina-specifichgcA-like genes were detected at all sites. This study, linking Hg methylation and nitrification in oxic seawater, furthers understanding of MeHg cycling in these high latitude waters, and the ocean in general. Furthermore, these studies inform predictions of how climate and human interactions could influence MeHg concentrations across the Arctic in the future.more » « less
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Biological nitrogen fixation converts inert di-nitrogen gas into bioavailable nitrogen and can be an important source of bioavailable nitrogen to organisms. This dataset synthesizes the aquatic nitrogen fixation rate measurements across inland and coastal waters. Data were derived from papers and datasets published by April 2022 and include rates measured using the acetylene reduction assay (ARA), 15N2 labeling, or the N2/Ar technique. The dataset is comprised of 4793 nitrogen fixation rates measurements from 267 studies, and is structured into four tables: 1) a reference table with sources from which data were extracted, 2) a rates table with nitrogen fixation rates that includes habitat, substrate, geographic coordinates, and method of measuring N2 fixation rates, 3) a table with supporting environmental and chemical data for a subset of the rate measurements when data were available, and 4) a data dictionary with definitions for each variable in each data table. This dataset was compiled and curated by the NSF-funded Aquatic Nitrogen Fixation Research Coordination Network (award number 2015825).more » « less
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