Quantitative estimates of sinking sea ice particulate organic carbon based on the biomarker IP25
Author(s) -
Thomas A. Brown,
ST Belt,
Michel Gosselin,
Maurice Levasseur,
M. Poulin,
C. J. Mundy
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
marine ecology progress series
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.151
H-Index - 188
eISSN - 1616-1599
pISSN - 0171-8630
DOI - 10.3354/meps11668
Subject(s) - sea ice , oceanography , arctic , water column , particulates , environmental science , physical geography , geography , ecology , geology , biology
© Inter-Research 2016. Sea ice-derived particulate organic carbon (iPOC) represents an important contribution of carbon to Arctic ecosystems, yet our ability to obtain realistic quantitative estimates of iPOC outside the sea ice matrix is currently somewhat limited. To address this challenge, we applied a novel approach to quantifying iPOC within the water column under melting sea ice by first measuring the proportion of the sea ice diatom biomarker IP 25 within iPOC in bottom ice samples obtained from Resolute Passage during spring 2012. We then compared this value with corresponding values obtained from a time series of water samples. Together, these reflected a period of ice melt and rapid release of iPOC, indicated by changing ice temperature and thickness, in addition to changes in the stable carbon isotope composition and concentration of iPOC, IP 25 and chlorophyll a within bottom ice. Estimates of iPOC in seawater were highest (0.15 to 0.22 mg l -1 ) in the upper 2 m, coincident with the reduction of iPOC in sea ice near the beginning of sampling, with iPOC accounting for an estimated 84 to 125% of total POC (tPOC). Collectively, this biomarker approach yielded realistic estimates of %iPOC, both numerically and in the context of melting sea ice following a spring bloom in the Canadian Arctic. We describe some assumptions of this approach and consider the impacts of possible caveats on quantitative estimates of iPOC derived using this methodology
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