@article{66d07d03f63f4a1e87792615adbdc36f,
title = "Deconvolving mechanisms of particle flux attenuation using nitrogen isotope analyses of amino acids",
abstract = "Particulate organic matter settling out of the euphotic zone is a major sink for atmospheric carbon dioxide and serves as a primary food source to mesopelagic food webs. Degradation of this organic matter encompasses a suite of mechanisms that attenuate flux, including heterotrophic metabolic processes of microbes and metazoans. The relative contributions of microbial and metazoan heterotrophy to flux attenuation, however, have been difficult to determine. We present results of compound specific nitrogen isotope analysis of amino acids of sinking particles from sediment traps and size-fractionated particles from in situ filtration between the surface and 500 m at Ocean Station Papa, collected during NASA EXPORTS (EXport Processes in the Ocean from RemoTe Sensing). With increasing depth, we observe: (1) that, based on the δ15N values of threonine, fecal pellets dominate the sinking particle flux and that attenuation of downward particle flux occurs largely via disaggregation in the upper mesopelagic; (2) an increasing trophic position of particles in the upper water column, reflecting increasing heterotrophic contributions to the nitrogen pool and the loss of particles via remineralization; and (3) increasing δ15N values of source amino acids in submicron and small (1–6 μm) particles, reflecting microbial particle solubilization. We further employ a Bayesian mixing model to estimate the relative proportions of fecal pellets, phytodetritus, and microbially degraded material in particles and compare these results and our interpretations of flux attenuation mechanisms to other, independent methods used during EXPORTS.",
keywords = "Carbon, Food-web, Fractionation, Matter, Oceans, Organic nitrogen, Pacific subtropical gyre, Particulate, Twilight zone, Zooplankton",
author = "Wojtal, {Paul K.} and Doherty, {Shannon C.} and Shea, {Connor H.} and Popp, {Brian N.} and Benitez-Nelson, {Claudia R.} and Buesseler, {Ken O.} and Estapa, {Margaret L.} and Montserrat Roca-Mart{\'i} and Close, {Hilary G.}",
note = "Funding Information: Funding for this project comes from NSF‐OCE grants 1830016 (Close) and 1829425 (Popp), as well as NASA Ocean Biology and Biogeochemistry program (80NSSC17K0555, Buesseler and Benitez‐Nelson; 80NSSC21K0015, Estapa and Buesseler) for field collections. MRM was supported by the WHOI's Ocean Twilight Zone study and the Ocean Frontier Institute International Postdoctoral Fellowship Program. The authors would like to thank the whole EXPORTS team, particularly the in situ pumping team, the sediment trap team, and the crew and scientific parties of both the R/V Sally Ride and R/V Roger Revelle (northeast Pacific, 2018). Collection of in situ pump samples was also performed by Steven Pike and Blaire Umhau. Sediment trap samples were also collected by Colleen Durkin, Pat Kelly, Melissa Omand, and Alyson Santoro. The authors would also like to thank Suzanne Stremler, Albert Ortiz, Joshua Pi, Elizabeth Yanuskiewicz, Kathryn McKenna, and Bella Horstmann for their help with sample preparation. Data from this article will also be published at the BCO‐DMO online database, where EXPORTS project data can be found at https://www.bco-dmo.org/project/768320 . This is University of Hawaii School of Ocean Science and Technology contribution number 11673. Publisher Copyright: {\textcopyright} 2023 The Authors. Limnology and Oceanography published by Wiley Periodicals LLC on behalf of Association for the Sciences of Limnology and Oceanography.",
year = "2023",
month = sep,
doi = "10.1002/lno.12398",
language = "English",
volume = "68",
pages = "1965--1981",
journal = "Limnology and Oceanography",
issn = "0024-3590",
number = "9",
}