The ocean contributes to regulating atmospheric CO2 levels, partly via variability in the fraction of primary production (PP) which is exported out of the surface layer (i.e., the e ratio). Southern Ocean studies have found that contrary to global‐scale analyses, an inverse relationship exists between e ratio and PP. This relationship remains unexplained, with potential hypotheses being (i) large export of dissolved organic carbon (DOC) in high PP areas, (ii) strong surface microbial recycling in high PP regions, and/or (iii) grazing‐mediated export that varies inversely with PP. We find that the export of DOC has a limited influence in setting the negative e ratio/PP relationship. However, we observed that at sites with low PP and high e ratios, zooplankton‐mediated export is large and surface microbial abundance low suggesting that both are important drivers of the magnitude of the e ratio in the Southern Ocean.
What causes the inverse relationship between primary production and export efficiency in the Southern Ocean?
F. L. Le Moigne,S. Henson,Emma Cavan,C. Georges,K. Pabortsava,E. Achterberg,E. Ceballos-Romero,Mike Zubkov,R. Sanders
Published 2016 in Geophysical Research Letters
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- Publication year
2016
- Venue
Geophysical Research Letters
- Publication date
2016-05-16
- Fields of study
Geology, Environmental Science
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