Relationship Between Carbon- and Oxygen-Based Primary Productivity in the Arctic Ocean, Svalbard Archipelago.
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Date
2019Author
Sanz-Martin, Marina
Vernet, Maria
Cape, Mattias R.
Mesa, Elena
Delgado-Huertas, Antonio
Reigstad, Marit
Wassmann, Paul
Duarte, Carlos M.
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Phytoplankton contribute half of the primary production (PP) in the biosphere and are the major source of energy for the Arctic Ocean ecosystem. While PP measurements are therefore fundamental to our understanding of marine biogeochemical cycling, the extent to which current methods provide a definitive estimate of this process remains uncertain given differences in their underlying approaches, and assumptions. This is especially the case in the Arctic Ocean, a region of the planet undergoing rapid evolution as a result of climate change, yet where PP measurements are sparse. In this study, we compared three common methods for estimating PP in the European Arctic Ocean: (1) production of O-18-labeled oxygen (GPP-O-18), (2) changes in dissolved oxygen (GPP-DO), and (3) incorporation rates of C-14-labeled carbon into particulate organic carbon (C-14-POC) and into total organic carbon (C-14-TOC, the sum of dissolved and particulate organic carbon). Results show that PP rates derived using.....
Journal
Frontiers In Marine ScienceVolume
6Issue
Article 468Page Range
15pp.Document Language
enSustainable Development Goals (SDG)
14.aMaturity Level
Pilot or DemonstratedSpatial Coverage
Arctic OceanDOI Original
https://doi.org/10.3389/fmars.2019.00468Citation
Sanz-Martín, M., Vernet, M., Cape, M. R., Mesa, E., Delgado-Huertas, A., Reigstad, M., Wassmann, P., and Duarte, C. M. (2019) Relationship Between Carbon- and Oxygen-Based Primary Productivity in the Arctic Ocean, Svalbard Archipelago. Frontiers in Marine Science, 6:468, 15pp. DOI: https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fmars.2019.00468Collections
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