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Creators/Authors contains: "Alkire, Matthew B."

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  1. Abstract

    Net community production (NCP) was estimated from nitrate profiles measured via biogeochemical Argo floats drifting in the Argentine Basin. Two criteria were tested for defining hydrographic fronts used to separate the study area into five zones: potential density anomaly at 450 m and potential temperature at 100 m. The latter definition was preferred as it minimized overlapping among zones. Float profiles within each zone were used to construct monthly median profiles of nitrate. Monthly nitrate inventories were calculated for each zone by integrating the median profiles between the surface and a depth of 100 or 200 m. Three methods were utilized to estimate NCP from the nitrate drawdown. The resulting mean NCP estimates indicated a decline in NCP from 3 to 4 mol C m−2 yr−1south of ∼40°S to ≤1 mol C m−2 yr−1north of ∼40°S. The monthly median profiles suggested 20%–100% of drawdown occurred by the end of December; however, chlorophyll fluorescence indicated phytoplankton activity persisted through austral summer. We speculate that primary production during these summer months was supported by regenerated nitrogen sources (not nitrate), despite replete concentrations, likely due to the relative scarcity of bioavailable iron known to persist in the region. While a northward advective flux of nitrate was strongly suggested by meridional nitrate gradients over the upper 0–300 m, vertical mixing was apparently necessary to stimulate new production, indicating both processes are important for NCP in the Argentine Basin. This work highlights the potential for floats in studying biogeochemical cycles in hydrographically complex regions.

     
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    Free, publicly-accessible full text available August 1, 2024
  2. Abstract A 15-yr duration record of mooring observations from the eastern (>70°E) Eurasian Basin (EB) of the Arctic Ocean is used to show and quantify the recently increased oceanic heat flux from intermediate-depth (~150–900 m) warm Atlantic Water (AW) to the surface mixed layer and sea ice. The upward release of AW heat is regulated by the stability of the overlying halocline, which we show has weakened substantially in recent years. Shoaling of the AW has also contributed, with observations in winter 2017–18 showing AW at only 80 m depth, just below the wintertime surface mixed layer, the shallowest in our mooring records. The weakening of the halocline for several months at this time implies that AW heat was linked to winter convection associated with brine rejection during sea ice formation. This resulted in a substantial increase of upward oceanic heat flux during the winter season, from an average of 3–4 W m −2 in 2007–08 to >10 W m −2 in 2016–18. This seasonal AW heat loss in the eastern EB is equivalent to a more than a twofold reduction of winter ice growth. These changes imply a positive feedback as reduced sea ice cover permits increased mixing, augmenting the summer-dominated ice-albedo feedback. 
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  3. Abstract

    Fronts in the NO parameter, a semiconservative tracer combining nitrate and dissolved oxygen, and dynamic height were observed in the central East Siberian Sea that distinguished Atlantic and Pacific contributions to the upper halocline of the Amerasian Basin during the summer of 2015. The NO front was aligned with the Transpolar Drift, and its position over the Mendeleyev Ridge indicates that Pacific waters were generally restricted to the Canada Basin and did not spread to the central Arctic. This interpretation lies in contrast to the distribution of Pacific water fractions, calculated using established relationships between nitrate and phosphate, and indicates that traditional tracers used to quantify Pacific water contributions to the Arctic Ocean are no longer accurate.

     
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