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  • 1
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    Royal Society of London
    In:  Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences, 368 (1621). p. 20130121.
    Publication Date: 2019-01-23
    Description: The ocean's nitrogen cycle is driven by complex microbial transformations, including nitrogen fixation, assimilation, nitrification, anammox and denitrification. Dinitrogen is the most abundant form of nitrogen in sea water but only accessible by nitrogen-fixing microbes. Denitrification and nitrification are both regulated by oxygen concentrations and potentially produce nitrous oxide (N2O), a climate-relevant atmospheric trace gas. The world's oceans, including the coastal areas and upwelling areas, contribute about 30 per cent to the atmospheric N2O budget and are, therefore, a major source of this gas to the atmosphere. Human activities now add more nitrogen to the environment than is naturally fixed. More than half of the nitrogen reaches the coastal ocean via river input and atmospheric deposition, of which the latter affects even remote oceanic regions. A nitrogen budget for the coastal and open ocean, where inputs and outputs match rather well, is presented. Furthermore, predicted climate change will impact the expansion of the oceans' oxygen minimum zones, the productivity of surface waters and presumably other microbial processes, with unpredictable consequences for the cycling of nitrogen. Nitrogen cycling is closely intertwined with that of carbon, phosphorous and other biologically important elements via biological stoichiometric requirements. This linkage implies that human alterations of nitrogen cycling are likely to have major consequences for other biogeochemical processes and ecosystem functions and services.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
    Format: text
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  • 2
    Publication Date: 2012-03-30
    Description: The production of transparent exopolymeric particles (TEP) by the coccolithophores, Emiliania huxleyi , Calcidiscus leptoporus and Syracosphaera pulchra was investigated in batch cultures. The abundance, size spectra and carbon content of TEP were examined during the exponential growth phase of both haploid and diploid life stages grown under ambient (400 µatm) and elevated (760 µatm) CO 2 partial pressure (pCO 2 ) conditions. Results showed species- and life stage-specific differences in TEP production rate (day –1 ) derived from abundance and carbon content of TEP. At 400 µatm, TEP production rate was the highest in the diploid stage of S. pulchra and E. huxleyi , while TEP carbon content per cell was the highest in the diploid stage of C. leptoporus . At 760 µatm, TEP production rate increased in almost all species and was closely related to the cell growth rates (except in the diploid stage of C. leptoporus ), while the slope values of the regression lines between TEP size distribution and concentration decreased. This means that the contribution of smaller size TEP was relatively more important than larger TEP in the high pCO 2 treatment. Elevated pCO 2 is potentially able to alter TEP size distribution. TEP-C content cell –1 generally decreased with increasing pCO 2 . TEP-C accounted for 1–24% of the cell particulate organic carbon production and was inversely related to increasing pCO 2 . TEP production by C. leptoporus and S. pulchra has not previously been documented. The amount of organic carbon released as TEP by these coccolithophores is comparable to and may even exceed TEP production by some diatoms.
    Print ISSN: 0142-7873
    Electronic ISSN: 1464-3774
    Topics: Biology
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