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Depth ranges of alkenone production in the central Pacific Ocean
Author(s) -
Ohkouchi N.,
Kawamura K.,
Kawahata H.,
Okada H.
Publication year - 1999
Publication title -
global biogeochemical cycles
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.512
H-Index - 187
eISSN - 1944-9224
pISSN - 0886-6236
DOI - 10.1029/1998gb900024
Subject(s) - alkenone , oceanography , emiliania huxleyi , haptophyte , thermocline , sea surface temperature , geology , water column , transect , latitude , mixed layer , middle latitudes , phytoplankton , climatology , nutrient , biology , ecology , geodesy
We report analytical results of long‐chain (C 37 −C 39 ) alkenones in the surface sediments taken along a latitudinal transect at 175°E from 48°N to 15°S. Unsaturation degree of C 37 alkenones (U k′ 37 ) indicated that alkenone temperature is the highest (about 28.3°C) in the tropical Pacific and decreases toward 48°N (about 10.1°C). Although the latitudinal trend of the alkenone temperature is generally similar to that of the observed sea surface temperature of the surface mixed layer, the former exhibits markedly lower values than the latter does in the midlatitude (35°−19°N). On the basis of the comparisons between water column temperatures and alkenone temperatures in the surface sediments, we estimated that in the midlatitudes alkenones are produced in the thermocline waters, whereas in the high (48°−40°N) and low (10°N−2°S) latitudes they are produced in the surface mixed layer. This result is supported by the depth distribution of Emiliania huxleyi and Gephyrocapsa oceanica along a 155°W transect in the central Pacific. The latitudinal distribution of the alkenone production layers estimated from U K′ 37 is found to be consistent with that of the nitrate, suggesting that the depth of alkenone production is mainly controlled by the nutrient supply from deeper waters. Alkenones in the sediments exhibited relatively large abundances in 43°−27°N with a maximum at 30°N, which may be explained by high productivity of haptophyte algae in Kuroshio Extension.