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Foraminifera-bound nitrogen isotopes evidence for reduced nitrogen fixation in the Atlantic Ocean during the last ice age. Abby Ren, Princeton Daniel Sigman, Princeton Nele Meckler, Caltech Rebecca Robinson, URI Yair Rosenthal, Rutgers Gerald Haug, ETH.
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Foraminifera-bound nitrogen isotopes evidence for reduced nitrogen fixation in the Atlantic Ocean during the last ice age Abby Ren, Princeton Daniel Sigman, Princeton Nele Meckler, Caltech Rebecca Robinson, URI Yair Rosenthal, Rutgers Gerald Haug, ETH
Low vs. High Latitude Low Latitude: Change nutrient inventory High Latitude: Change nutrient consumption
~3 kyr ~15-80 kyr Low-latitude biological pump N2 N fixation denitrification N2 Broecker, 1982
Lower water column denitrification during LGM Chile: de Pol-Holz et al, 2006 SBB: Emmer and Thunell, 2000 AS: Altabet et al., 2002
Low d15N of nitrate in the North Atlantic thermocline: Paleoceanographic utility [NO3-] (µM) 15N of nitrate (‰ vs. air) Knapp et al., 2005
Planktonic foraminifera Orbulina universa photo: H. Spero Montoya et al., 2002
Thermocline nitrate vs. coretop foraminifera Ren et al., 2009
ODP site 999A: Caribbean Sea Holocene LGM Ren et al., 2009 18O, age: Schmidt et al., 2004
N fixation rate: LGM/Holocene ~ 20% Ren et al., 2009 POM: Altabet, 1988 NO3- : Knapp et al., 2005
Deglacial increases in both denitrification and N fixation Chile: de Pol-Holz et al, 2006 SBB: Emmer and Thunell, 2000 AS: Altabet et al., 2002 Cariaco: Haug et al., 1998
A stable N inventory regulated by N/P ratio? ~1P:16N Fix! Don’t Fix! Gruber and Sarmiento, 1997
Deglacial scenario:N fixation feedback through N/P sensitivity
Summary • In Caribbean Sea sediments, planktonic foraminiferal 15N/14N decreases from the last ice age to the current interglacial. • The foraminiferal change is best explained by less N fixation in the Atlantic during the last ice age, leading to higher nitrate 15N/14N in the Caribbean thermocline. • The reconstructed increase in N fixation at the end of the last ice age is most likely a response to the previously recognized deglacial increase in global denitrification. • As with our findings regarding the modern Atlantic N fixation rate, this is consistent with a strong P control on N fixation. • A significant glacial/interglacial change in the nitrate reservoir has not been ruled out. However, our evidence that Atlantic N fixation acts as a negative feedback argues qualitatively for limits to such a change.
Acknowledgement • Princeton University • Consortium of Ocean Leadership • Sigman Group: Franky Wang, Brigitte Brunelle, Julie Granger, Peter Difore. • J. Bernhard and D. McCorkle
Minimal Holocene 15N decrease in bulk sediment Ren et al., 2009 18O, age: Schmidt et al., 2004
Foraminifera-bound N isotope analysis • Sieve, pick, crush • Clean fragments with wet oxidation • Acid dissolution to release internal Norg • Norg NO3- (persulfate oxidation) • NO3- N2O (denitrifier method) • N2O isotopic analysis (continuous flow, purge/trap, gas chromatography, gas-source magnetic sector mass spectrometry)
Thermocline nitrate/surface sediment comparison Altabet, 2005
Evidence for terrestrial and shelf material in ODP 999A sediments C/N~15 (by weight) terrestrial organics
Bulk sediment 15N records from the North Pacific Bulk sediment records from diverse settings: Mean ocean nitrate 15N did not decrease (much) into the Holocene. Kao et al., 2008
Incomplete nutrient consumption in the polar ocean Surface nitrate Surface chlorophyll
Rapid surface-deep exchange in the polar ocean releases deeply sequestered CO2 to the atmosphere Eq. S
The link between the N isotopes and nitrate consumption
Subantarctic (E11-2) diatom-bound 15N/14N: Link to glacial/interglacial cycles • More complete nitrate consumption in glacial Subantarctic d18O + age: Ninneman and Charles, 1997
Subantarctic is well situated fordust-driven iron fertilization during the ice ages modern annual average dust deposition (g m-2 yr-1) Mahowald et al., 2005
Antarctic 15N/14N:higher during the last glacial maximum LGM
Polar AA nutrient drawdown: More CO2 without complete deepwater formation shutdown Subantarctic nutrient drawdown: CO2 ~40 ppm AA deep water formation “off”: CO2 ~35 ppm Glacial/interglacial changes in the Southern Ocean inferred from the N isotopes
Low and High latitude connection Lower rates of N fixation