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Subsurface tropical Pacific nitrogen isotopic composition of nitrate: Biogeochemical signals and their transport
Author(s) -
Rafter Patrick A.,
Sigman Daniel M.,
Charles Christopher D.,
Kaiser Jan,
Haug Gerald H.
Publication year - 2012
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 - 10.1029/2010gb003979
Subject(s) - oceanography , biogeochemical cycle , transect , nitrate , thermocline , geology , biogeochemistry , water mass , new production , nutrient , geotraces , environmental science , phytoplankton , environmental chemistry , chemistry , organic chemistry
We report measurements of the nitrogen isotopic composition of nitrate (the δ 15 N of NO 3 − ) across the equatorial Pacific, for zonal transects from 165°E to 95°W and meridional transects across 95° and 110°W. The δ 15 N of NO 3 − is similar in the equatorial thermocline (≈100 m) and intermediate depth waters (≈150 to 600 m), averaging (7.1 ± 0.3)‰ and (7.1 ± 0.1)‰, respectively. These values are more than 2‰ higher than subthermocline waters of the Southern and Atlantic Oceans and are ≈1‰ higher than putative source waters in the high latitude South Pacific (Subantarctic Mode Water, SAMW). The combined constraints of nitrate concentration and δ 15 N of NO 3 − in the equatorial Pacific require (1) lateral exchange between the high‐latitude source waters and the zones of denitrification in the eastern tropical Pacific and (2) the accumulation of remineralized nutrients at depth. The zonal uniformity of the subsurface equatorial Pacific δ 15 N of NO 3 − indicates rapid transport within the equatorial zone, which works to homogenize the δ 15 N of NO 3 − across the Pacific basin. Against this backdrop of high δ 15 N of NO 3 − in the tropical Pacific, we find a discrete off‐equatorial core of lower δ 15 N of NO 3 − (5.5 ± 0.3)‰ concentrated at 5°S and 150 to 200 m along the 110° and 95°W transects and in apparent association with the Southern Subsurface Counter Current (SSCC). We propose that the remineralized products of nitrogen fixation, at the source of the SSCC in the western south Pacific, are the origin of the low δ 15 N of NO 3 − in these waters.