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  • 1
    Publication Date: 2023-01-30
    Keywords: Ammonia; black carbon; Black carbon, dissolved; Cadmium; Carbon, organic, dissolved; Chlorophyll a; Cobalt; Copper; Date/Time of event; DEPTH, water; Event label; Iron; Latitude of event; Lead; Longitude of event; Manganese; Nickel; Nitrate and Nitrite; Phosphate; Replicates; Salinity; Santa Barbara Basin; Santa Barbara Basin, California, United States of America; SBB_SW-1; SBB_SW-2; SBB_SW-3; SBB_SW-4; SBB_SW-5; SBB_SW-6; SBB_SW-7; SBB_SW-8; Silicate; SW-1; SW-2; SW-3; SW-4; SW-5; SW-6; SW-7; SW-8; Temperature, water; Thomas Fire; trace metals; Ventura River; wildfire; Zinc; δ13C, chlorophyll a; δ13C, chlorophyll a, standard deviation
    Type: Dataset
    Format: text/tab-separated-values, 164 data points
    Location Call Number Limitation Availability
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  • 2
    Publication Date: 2023-01-30
    Keywords: black carbon; Black carbon, dissolved; Cadmium; Calculated; Carbon, organic, dissolved; Cobalt; Comment; Copper; Date/Time of event; Discharge; Event label; Height; Iron; Latitude of event; Lead; Longitude of event; Manganese; Nickel; Santa Barbara Basin; Thomas Fire; Time in hours; trace metals; Ventura River; Ventura River, California, United States of America; VR-1; VR-10; VR-11; VR-12; VR-13; VR-2; VR-3; VR-4; VR-5; VR-6; VR-7; VR-8; VR-9; wildfire; Zinc
    Type: Dataset
    Format: text/tab-separated-values, 287 data points
    Location Call Number Limitation Availability
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  • 3
    Publication Date: 2023-07-11
    Description: Aerosol, seawater, and floodwater samples were taken during the 2017 California Thomas Fire and subsequent flash flood event. These samples were used to examine how fire-flood sequences affect metal and black carbon delivery to coastal waters, such as the Santa Barbara Basin (SBB). On day 11 of the Thomas Fire, aerosols sampled at sea level under a smoke plume over the SBB found high levels of PM2.5, levoglucosan, and black carbon (average: 49 μg/m^3, 1.05 μg/m^3, 14.93 μg/m^3, respectively) and both soluble and total aerosol metal concentrations were consistent with a forest fire signature. Metal, nutrient, and chlorophyll a concentrations in surface seawater (average: 2.42 nM Fe, 0.14 µM phosphate, and 0.44 µgChla/L) were similar to concentrations during non-fire conditions, thus we could not establish fire-related increases in the SBB surface waters. On days 37 to 40 of the fire, before, during, and after a flash flood in the Ventura River, dissolved organic carbon, dissolved black carbon, and dissolved metal concentrations were positively correlated with discharge. Our findings confirm that black carbon and metals were released by the Thomas Fire and transported by both atmospheric and fluvial pathways.
    Keywords: black carbon; Santa Barbara Basin; Thomas Fire; trace metals; Ventura River; wildfire
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 3 datasets
    Location Call Number Limitation Availability
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  • 4
    Publication Date: 2023-07-11
    Keywords: black carbon; Black carbon, aerosol; Cadmium; Cadmium, soluble; Cobalt; Cobalt, soluble; Copper; Copper, soluble; Date/time end; Date/time start; Iron; Iron, soluble; Lead; Lead, soluble; Levoglucosan; Manganese; Manganese, soluble; Manganese, total; Nickel; Nickel, soluble; Particulate matter, 〈 2.5 µm; Sample ID; Sample volume; Santa_Barbara_Basin_Aerosols; Santa Barbara Basin; Size fraction; Thomas Fire; trace metals; Ventura River; wildfire; Zinc; Zinc, soluble
    Type: Dataset
    Format: text/tab-separated-values, 383 data points
    Location Call Number Limitation Availability
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  • 5
    Publication Date: 2024-01-06
    Description: The Tara Pacific expedition (2016-2018) sampled coral ecosystems around 32 islands in the Pacific Ocean, and sampled the surface of oceanic waters at 249 locations, resulting in the collection of nearly 58,000 samples. The expedition was designed to systematically study corals, fish, plankton, and seawater, and included the collection of samples for advanced biogeochemical, molecular, and imaging analysis. Here we provide the total dissolvable (i.e. acidified unfiltered whole seawater) Fe, Zn, Mn, Ni, Cd, Co, Cu, and Pb concentrations for 242 surface seawater samples. Trace metal analyses were performed with the goals of characterizing the surface seawater trace metal distribution across the open ocean and coastal regions in both the Atlantic and Pacific, and exploring metal-dependent ecosystem structure and metabolism. Some of the findings include high concentrations of iron (Fe) and manganese (Mn) in several regions, such as the North Atlantic Ocean and near the South Pacific islands, possibly due to Saharan dust and hydrothermal vent input, respectively. Elevated lead (Pb) was found in the North Pacific near southeast Asia, where anthropogenic sources may contribute. We also observe interbasin differences in concentrations for most of the metals, such as cobalt (Co), which is relatively high in the North Atlantic in comparison to the Pacific, perhaps due to dust deposition or continental weathering. There are also intrabasin differences in metal concentrations between oligotrophic and upwelling regions, exemplified by the higher cadmium (Cd) concentrations near the Peruvian coast, likely due to upwelling. Overall we captured high-resolution trace metal data that depicts the nuances in the metal distribution of the global ocean.
    Keywords: Bottle, multi level trace metal; Cadmium, dissolved; Cobalt, dissolved; Comment; Copper, dissolved; Depth, bottom/max; Depth, top/min; DEPTH, water; Environmental feature; Event label; Fondation Tara Expeditions; FondTara; HANDHELD-BOW-POLE; INLINE-PUMP; Iron, dissolved; Lead, dissolved; Manganese, dissolved; MLTM; Nickel, dissolved; OA000-I00-S00; OA000-I10-S01; OA000-I10-S02; OA000-I14-S00; OA000-I18-S03; OA000-I21-S01; OA000-I21-S02; OA000-I31-S00; OA001-I00-S00; OA002-I00-S00; OA003-I00-S00; OA004-I00-S00; OA005-I00-S00; OA006-I00-S00; OA009-I00-S00; OA010-I00-S00; OA011-I00-S00; OA012-I00-S00; OA013-I00-S00; OA014-I00-S00; OA015-I00-S00; OA016-I00-S00; OA017-I00-S00; OA018-I00-S00; OA019-I00-S00; OA020-I00-S00; OA021-I00-S00; OA022-I00-S00; OA023-I00-S00; OA024-I00-S00; OA025-I00-S00; OA026-I00-S00; OA027-I00-S00; OA028-I00-S00; OA029-I03-S00; OA030-I03-S00; OA031-I00-S00; OA032-I00-S00; OA033-I00-S00; OA039-I00-S00; OA040-I00-S00; OA041-I04-S00; OA042-I04-S00; OA043-I04-S00; OA044-I04-S00; OA045-I00-S00; OA046-I00-S00; OA047-I00-S00; OA048-I05-S00; OA049-I05-S00; OA050-I05-S00; OA051-I00-S00; OA052-I00-S00; OA053-I06-S00; OA054-I06-S00; OA055-I06-S00; OA056-I00-S00; OA057-I00-S00; OA058-I00-S00; OA061-I07-S00; OA062-I00-S00; OA063-I08-S00; OA064-I08-S00; OA065-I00-S00; OA066-I09-S00; OA067-I09-S00; OA068-I10-S00; OA069-I10-S00; OA070-I10-S00; OA071-I10-S00; OA072-I11-S00; OA073-I11-S00; OA074-I11-S00; OA075-I12-S00; OA076-I12-S00; OA077-I12-S00; OA078-I00-S00; OA079-I00-S00; OA080-I13-S00; OA081-I13-S00; OA082-I13-S00; OA083-I13-S00; OA084-I00-S00; OA085-I00-S00; OA086-I00-S00; OA087-I00-S00; OA088-I00-S00; OA089-I14-S00; OA090-I14-S00; OA091-I14-S00; OA092-I15-S00; OA093-I15-S00; OA094-I00-S00; OA095-I16-S00; OA096-I00-S00; OA097-I00-S00; OA098-I00-S00; OA099-I00-S00; OA100-I00-S00; OA101-I00-S00; OA102-I00-S00; OA103-I00-S00; OA104-I00-S00; OA105-I00-S00; OA106-I00-S00; OA107-I00-S00; OA108-I00-S00; OA109-I00-S00; OA110-I00-S00; OA111-I00-S00; OA112-I00-S00; OA113-I00-S00; OA114-I00-S00; OA115-I00-S00; OA116-I00-S00; OA117-I00-S00; OA118-I00-S00; OA119-I00-S00; OA120-I00-S00; OA121-I00-S00; OA122-I00-S00; OA123-I00-S00; OA124-I00-S00; OA125-I00-S00; OA126-I00-S00; OA127-I18-S00; OA128-I18-S00; OA129-I18-S00; OA130-I18-S00; OA131-I00-S00; OA132-I00-S00; OA133-I00-S00; OA134-I00-S00; OA135-I00-S00; OA136-I00-S00; OA137-I00-S00; OA139-I00-S00; OA140-I19-S00; OA141-I19-S00; OA142-I19-S00; OA143-I19-S00; OA144-I00-S00; OA145-I20-S00; OA146-I20-S00; OA147-I00-S00; OA148-I21-S00; OA149-I21-S00; OA150-I00-S00; OA151-I00-S00; OA152-I00-S00; OA153-I00-S00; OA154-I00-S00; OA155-I22-S00; OA156-I23-S00; OA157-I23-S00; OA158-I23-S00; OA159-I23-S00; OA160-I24-S00; OA161-I24-S00; OA162-I24-S00; OA163-I00-S00; OA164-I00-S00; OA165-I00-S00; OA166-I25-S00; OA167-I26-S00; OA168-I26-S00; OA169-I00-S00; OA170-I27-S00; OA171-I27-S00; OA172-I28-S00; OA173-I00-S00; OA174-I00-S00; OA175-I00-S00; OA176-I00-S00; OA177-I00-S00; OA178-I00-S00; OA179-I00-S00; OA180-I00-S00; OA181-I00-S00; OA182-I00-S00; OA184-I00-S00; OA185-I00-S00; OA186-I00-S00; OA187-I00-S00; OA188-I00-S00; OA189-I00-S00; OA190-I29-S00; OA191-I29-S00; OA192-I00-S00; OA193-I00-S00; OA194-I00-S00; OA195-I00-S00; OA196-I00-S00; OA197-I00-S00; OA198-I00-S00; OA199-I00-S00; OA200-I00-S00; OA201-I00-S00; OA202-I00-S00; OA203-I00-S00; OA204-I00-S00; OA205-I00-S00; OA206-I00-S00; OA207-I00-S00; OA208-I00-S00; OA209-I00-S00; OA210-I00-S00; OA211-I00-S00; OA212-I00-S00; OA213-I00-S00; OA214-I00-S00; OA216-I30-S00; OA217-I00-S00; OA218-I00-S00; OA221-I31-S00; OA223-I00-S00; OA224-I00-S00; OA225-I00-S00; OA226-I00-S00; OA227-I00-S00; OA228-I00-S00; OA229-I00-S00; OA230-I32-S00; OA232-I32-S00; OA233-I00-S00; OA234-I00-S00; OA235-I00-S00; OA236-I00-S00; OA237-I00-S00; OA238-I00-S00; OA240-I00-S00; OA241-I00-S00; OA242-I00-S00; OA243-I00-S00; OA244-I00-S00; OA245-I00-S00; OA246-I00-S00; OA247-I00-S00; OA249-I00-S00; Pacific; Quality control; Sample code/label; Sample comment; Sample ID; surface seawater; SV Tara; TARA_20160529T1635Z_D_O-SRF_HANDHELD-BOW-POLE; TARA_20160530T1630Z_D_O-SRF_HANDHELD-BOW-POLE; TARA_20160531T1345Z_D_O-SRF_HANDHELD-BOW-POLE; TARA_20160601T1629Z_D_O-SRF_HANDHELD-BOW-POLE; TARA_20160602T1436Z_D_O-SRF_HANDHELD-BOW-POLE; TARA_20160604T1445Z_D_O-SRF_HANDHELD-BOW-POLE; TARA_20160605T1850Z_D_O-SRF_HANDHELD-BOW-POLE; TARA_20160608T1605Z_D_O-SRF_HANDHELD-BOW-POLE; TARA_20160609T1734Z_D_O-SRF_HANDHELD-BOW-POLE; TARA_20160610T1502Z_D_O-SRF_HANDHELD-BOW-POLE; TARA_20160611T1513Z_D_O-SRF_HANDHELD-BOW-POLE; TARA_20160613T1430Z_D_O-SRF_HANDHELD-BOW-POLE; TARA_20160614T1325Z_D_O-SRF_HANDHELD-BOW-POLE; TARA_20160615T1643Z_D_O-SRF_HANDHELD-BOW-POLE; TARA_20160616T1906Z_D_O-SRF_HANDHELD-BOW-POLE; TARA_20160617T1920Z_D_O-SRF_HANDHELD-BOW-POLE; TARA_20160618T1702Z_D_O-SRF_HANDHELD-BOW-POLE; TARA_20160619T1928Z_D_O-SRF_HANDHELD-BOW-POLE; TARA_20160620T2234Z_D_O-SRF_HANDHELD-BOW-POLE; TARA_20160621T1710Z_D_O-SRF_HANDHELD-BOW-POLE; TARA_20160622T1700Z_D_O-SRF_HANDHELD-BOW-POLE; TARA_20160623T1715Z_D_O-SRF_HANDHELD-BOW-POLE; TARA_20160624T2100Z_D_O-SRF_HANDHELD-BOW-POLE; TARA_20160625T1800Z_D_O-SRF_HANDHELD-BOW-POLE; TARA_20160626T1800Z_D_O-SRF_HANDHELD-BOW-POLE; TARA_20160627T1350Z_D_O-SRF_HANDHELD-BOW-POLE; TARA_20160706T2202Z_D_O-SRF_HANDHELD-BOW-POLE; TARA_20160712T1649Z_D_O-SRF_HANDHELD-BOW-POLE; TARA_20160816T2000Z_D_I-SRF_HANDHELD-BOW-POLE; TARA_20160817T2124Z_D_I-SRF_HANDHELD-BOW-POLE; TARA_20160818T2253Z_D_O-SRF_HANDHELD-BOW-POLE; TARA_20160819T2150Z_D_O-SRF_HANDHELD-BOW-POLE; TARA_20160819T2355Z_D_O-SRF_INLINE-PUMP; TARA_20160820T2229Z_D_O-SRF_HANDHELD-BOW-POLE; TARA_20160822T2300Z_D_O-SRF_HANDHELD-BOW-POLE; TARA_20160823T2325Z_D_O-SRF_HANDHELD-BOW-POLE; TARA_20160824T2325Z_D_O-SRF_HANDHELD-BOW-POLE; TARA_20160825T2355Z_D_O-SRF_HANDHELD-BOW-POLE; TARA_20160828T0013Z_D_O-SRF_HANDHELD-BOW-POLE; TARA_20160828T1845Z_D_O-SRF_HANDHELD-BOW-POLE; TARA_20160829T1944Z_D_O-SRF_HANDHELD-BOW-POLE; TARA_20160830T1644Z_D_I-SRF_HANDHELD-BOW-POLE; TARA_20160831T0515Z_N_I-SRF_HANDHELD-BOW-POLE; TARA_20160831T1723Z_D_I-SRF_HANDHELD-BOW-POLE; TARA_20160908T0615Z_N_I-SRF_HANDHELD-BOW-POLE; TARA_20160909T2325Z_D_O-SRF_HANDHELD-BOW-POLE; TARA_20160910T1615Z_D_O-SRF_HANDHELD-BOW-POLE; TARA_20160911T1802Z_D_O-SRF_HANDHELD-BOW-POLE; TARA_20160912T1712Z_D_I-SRF_HANDHELD-BOW-POLE; TARA_20160917T1520Z_D_I-SRF_HANDHELD-BOW-POLE; TARA_20160917T2237Z_D_I-SRF_HANDHELD-BOW-POLE; TARA_20160919T0110Z_D_I-SRF_HANDHELD-BOW-POLE; TARA_20160919T1708Z_D_O-SRF_HANDHELD-BOW-POLE; TARA_20160920T2340Z_D_I-SRF_HANDHELD-BOW-POLE; TARA_20160921T0603Z_N_I-SRF_HANDHELD-BOW-POLE; TARA_20160928T0751Z_N_I-SRF_HANDHELD-BOW-POLE; TARA_20160929T0110Z_D_O-SRF_HANDHELD-BOW-POLE; TARA_20160929T1905Z_D_O-SRF_HANDHELD-BOW-POLE; TARA_20161001T1721Z_D_O-SRF_HANDHELD-BOW-POLE; TARA_20161111T0102Z_D_I-SRF_HANDHELD-BOW-POLE; TARA_20161111T1810Z_D_O-SRF_HANDHELD-BOW-POLE; TARA_20161112T1810Z_D_I-SRF_HANDHELD-BOW-POLE; TARA_20161118T0317Z_D_I-SRF_HANDHELD-BOW-POLE; TARA_20161119T1921Z_D_O-SRF_HANDHELD-BOW-POLE; TARA_20161120T1915Z_D_I-SRF_HANDHELD-BOW-POLE; TARA_20161120T2155Z_D_I-SRF_HANDHELD-BOW-POLE; TARA_20161127T0232Z_D_I-SRF_HANDHELD-BOW-POLE; TARA_20161127T2023Z_D_I-SRF_HANDHELD-BOW-POLE; TARA_20161128T0826Z_N_I-SRF_HANDHELD-BOW-POLE; TARA_20161130T0206Z_D_S-SRF_HANDHELD-BOW-POLE; TARA_20161201T0215Z_D_S-SRF_HANDHELD-BOW-POLE; TARA_20161203T1902Z_D_I-SRF_HANDHELD-BOW-POLE; TARA_20161204T0303Z_D_I-SRF_HANDHELD-BOW-POLE; TARA_20161204T1723Z_D_I-SRF_HANDHELD-BOW-POLE; TARA_20161228T0551Z_D_I-SRF_HANDHELD-BOW-POLE; TARA_20161228T2150Z_D_I-SRF_HANDHELD-BOW-POLE; TARA_20161229T2310Z_D_I-SRF_HANDHELD-BOW-POLE; TARA_20170103T0931Z_N_I-SRF_HANDHELD-BOW-POLE; TARA_20170103T2210Z_D_I-SRF_HANDHELD-BOW-POLE; TARA_20170104T2118Z_D_O-SRF_HANDHELD-BOW-POLE; TARA_20170105T2251Z_D_O-SRF_HANDHELD-BOW-POLE; TARA_20170106T0955Z_N_I-SRF_HANDHELD-BOW-POLE; TARA_20170106T2245Z_D_I-SRF_HANDHELD-BOW-POLE; TARA_20170112T0647Z_D_I-SRF_HANDHELD-BOW-POLE; TARA_20170112T2125Z_D_I-SRF_HANDHELD-
    Type: Dataset
    Format: text/tab-separated-values, 14588 data points
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  • 6
    Publication Date: 2023-02-08
    Description: Despite very low concentrations of cobalt in marine waters, cyanobacteria in the genus Prochlorococcus retain the genetic machinery for the synthesis and use of cobalt-bearing cofactors (cobalamins) in their genomes. We explore cobalt metabolism in a Prochlorococcus isolate from the equatorial Pacific Ocean (strain MIT9215) through a series of growth experiments under iron- and cobalt-limiting conditions. Metal uptake rates, quantitative proteomic measurements of cobalamin-dependent enzymes, and theoretical calculations all indicate that Prochlorococcus MIT9215 can sustain growth with less than 50 cobalt atoms per cell, ∼100-fold lower than minimum iron requirements for these cells (∼5,100 atoms per cell). Quantitative descriptions of Prochlorococcus cobalt limitation are used to interpret the cobalt distribution in the equatorial Pacific Ocean, where surface concentrations are among the lowest measured globally but Prochlorococcus biomass is high. A low minimum cobalt quota ensures that other nutrients, notably iron, will be exhausted before cobalt can be fully depleted, helping to explain the persistence of cobalt-dependent metabolism in marine cyanobacteria.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
    Format: text
    Format: text
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  • 7
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    Massachusetts Institute of Technology and Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution
    Publication Date: 2022-05-25
    Description: Submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution February 2017
    Description: Although over a dozen elements are needed to support phytoplankton growth, only a few are considered to be growth-limiting. As the central atom in vitamin B12, cobalt is crucial for metabolism, but its status as a limiting nutrient is uncertain. This thesis investigates the geochemical controls on oceanic cobalt scarcity and their biological consequences. Analysis of over 1000 samples collected in the Tropical Pacific Ocean reveals a dissolved cobalt distribution that is strongly coupled to dissolved oxygen, with peak concentrations where oxygen is lowest. Large cobalt plumes within anoxic waters are maintained by three processes: 1) a cobalt supply from organic matter remineralization, 2) an amplified sedimentary source from oxygen-depleted coastlines, and 3) low-oxygen inhibition of manganese oxidation, which scavenges cobalt from the water column. Rates of scavenging are calculated from a global synthesis of recent GEOTRACES data and agree with cobalt accumulation rates in pelagic sediments. Because both sources and sinks are tied to the extent of oxygen minimum zones, oceanic cobalt inventories are likely dynamic on the span of decades. Despite extremely low cobalt in the South Pacific gyre, the cyanobacterium Prochlorococcus thrives. Minimum cobalt and iron requirements of a Prochlorococcus strain isolated from the Equatorial Pacific are quantified. Cobalt quotas are related to demand for ribonucleotide reductase and methionine synthase enzymes, which catalyze critical steps in DNA and protein biosynthesis, respectively. Compared to other cyanobacteria, a streamlined metal physiology makes Prochlorococcus susceptible to competitive inhibition of cobalt uptake by low levels of zinc. Although phytoplankton in the Equatorial Pacific are subject to chronic iron-limitation, widespread cobalt scarcity and vulnerability to zinc inhibition observed in culture imply that wild Prochlorococcus are not far from a cobalt-limitation threshold.
    Description: I am lucky to have benefitted from major financial support of the Saito Lab by the National Science Foundation and the Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation. Specifically, National Science Foundation grants for the Center for Microbial Oceanography Research and Education (CMORE, DBI-0424599), GEOTRACES Pacific and Artic projects (OCE-1233261 and OCE- 1540254), and OCE-1220484 funded my thesis work. National Science Foundation grants OCE- 1031271 and OCE-1337780 and Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation grants 3782 and 3934 to the Saito lab also provided instrumentation and funded field expeditions that enabled this work.
    Keywords: Cobalt ; Zinc ; Plankton ; Kilo Moana (Ship) Cruise KM1128
    Repository Name: Woods Hole Open Access Server
    Type: Thesis
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  • 8
    Publication Date: 2022-05-25
    Description: © The Author(s), 2020. This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License. The definitive version was published in Bundy, R. M., Tagliabue, A., Hawco, N. J., Morton, P. L., Twining, B. S., Hatta, M., Noble, A. E., Cape, M. R., John, S. G., Cullen, J. T., & Saito, M. A. Elevated sources of cobalt in the Arctic Ocean. Biogeosciences, 17(19), (2020): 4745-4767, doi:10.5194/bg-17-4745-2020.
    Description: Cobalt (Co) is an important bioactive trace metal that is the metal cofactor in cobalamin (vitamin B12) which can limit or co-limit phytoplankton growth in many regions of the ocean. Total dissolved and labile Co measurements in the Canadian sector of the Arctic Ocean during the U.S. GEOTRACES Arctic expedition (GN01) and the Canadian International Polar Year GEOTRACES expedition (GIPY14) revealed a dynamic biogeochemical cycle for Co in this basin. The major sources of Co in the Arctic were from shelf regions and rivers, with only minimal contributions from other freshwater sources (sea ice, snow) and eolian deposition. The most striking feature was the extremely high concentrations of dissolved Co in the upper 100 m, with concentrations routinely exceeding 800 pmol L−1 over the shelf regions. This plume of high Co persisted throughout the Arctic basin and extended to the North Pole, where sources of Co shifted from primarily shelf-derived to riverine, as freshwater from Arctic rivers was entrained in the Transpolar Drift. Dissolved Co was also strongly organically complexed in the Arctic, ranging from 70 % to 100 % complexed in the surface and deep ocean, respectively. Deep-water concentrations of dissolved Co were remarkably consistent throughout the basin (∼55 pmol L−1), with concentrations reflecting those of deep Atlantic water and deep-ocean scavenging of dissolved Co. A biogeochemical model of Co cycling was used to support the hypothesis that the majority of the high surface Co in the Arctic was emanating from the shelf. The model showed that the high concentrations of Co observed were due to the large shelf area of the Arctic, as well as to dampened scavenging of Co by manganese-oxidizing (Mn-oxidizing) bacteria due to the lower temperatures. The majority of this scavenging appears to have occurred in the upper 200 m, with minimal additional scavenging below this depth. Evidence suggests that both dissolved Co (dCo) and labile Co (LCo) are increasing over time on the Arctic shelf, and these limited temporal results are consistent with other tracers in the Arctic. These elevated surface concentrations of Co likely lead to a net flux of Co out of the Arctic, with implications for downstream biological uptake of Co in the North Atlantic and elevated Co in North Atlantic Deep Water. Understanding the current distributions of Co in the Arctic will be important for constraining changes to Co inputs resulting from regional intensification of freshwater fluxes from ice and permafrost melt in response to ongoing climate change.
    Description: This work was supported by National Science Foundation Ocean Sciences (NSF OCE) grants (grant nos. 1435056, 1736599, and 1924554) to Mak A. Saito, as well as by a Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution Postdoctoral Scholar grant to Randelle M. Bundy and Mattias R. Cape. Mariko Hatta was supported by NSF OCE grant no. 1439253. Alessandro Tagliabue was supported by the European Research Council (ERC) under the European Union's Horizon 2020 research and innovation program (BYONIC, grant no. 724289). Benjamin S. Twining was supported by NSF OCE grant no. 1435862. Peter L. Morton was supported by NSF OCE grant no. 1436019, and a portion of the work was completed at the NHMFL, which is supported by the National Science Foundation through DMR-1644779 and the State of Florida. Jay T. Cullen was supported by the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council (NSERC) of Canada and an International Polar Year (IPY) Canada grant.
    Repository Name: Woods Hole Open Access Server
    Type: Article
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  • 9
    Publication Date: 2022-05-25
    Description: © The Author(s), 2016. This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License. The definitive version was published in Biogeosciences 13 (2016): 5697-5717, doi:10.5194/bg-13-5697-2016.
    Description: Cobalt is a nutrient to phytoplankton, but knowledge about its biogeochemical cycling is limited, especially in the Pacific Ocean. Here, we report sections of dissolved cobalt and labile dissolved cobalt from the US GEOTRACES GP16 transect in the South Pacific. The cobalt distribution is closely tied to the extent and intensity of the oxygen minimum zone in the eastern South Pacific with highest concentrations measured at the oxycline near the Peru margin. Below 200 m, remineralization and circulation produce an inverse relationship between cobalt and dissolved oxygen that extends throughout the basin. Within the oxygen minimum zone, elevated concentrations of labile cobalt are generated by input from coastal sources and reduced scavenging at low O2. As these high cobalt waters are upwelled and advected offshore, phytoplankton export returns cobalt to low-oxygen water masses underneath. West of the Peru upwelling region, dissolved cobalt is less than 10 pM in the euphotic zone and strongly bound by organic ligands. Because the cobalt nutricline within the South Pacific gyre is deeper than in oligotrophic regions in the North and South Atlantic, cobalt involved in sustaining phytoplankton productivity in the gyre is heavily recycled and ultimately arrives from lateral transport of upwelled waters from the eastern margin. In contrast to large coastal inputs, atmospheric deposition and hydrothermal vents along the East Pacific Rise appear to be minor sources of cobalt. Overall, these results demonstrate that oxygen biogeochemistry exerts a strong influence on cobalt cycling.
    Description: This work was funded by NSF awards OCE-1233733 to MAS, OCE-1232814 to BST, and OCE-1237011 to JAR.
    Repository Name: Woods Hole Open Access Server
    Type: Article
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  • 10
    Publication Date: 2022-05-25
    Description: © The Author(s), 2018. This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License. The definitive version was published in Global Biogeochemical Cycles 32 (2018): 594-616, doi:10.1002/2017GB005830.
    Description: Cobalt is an important micronutrient for ocean microbes as it is present in vitamin B12 and is a co‐factor in various metalloenzymes that catalyze cellular processes. Moreover, when seawater availability of cobalt is compared to biological demands, cobalt emerges as being depleted in seawater, pointing to a potentially important limiting role. To properly account for the potential biological role for cobalt, there is therefore a need to understand the processes driving the biogeochemical cycling of cobalt and, in particular, the balance between external inputs and internal cycling. To do so, we developed the first cobalt model within a state‐of‐the‐art three‐dimensional global ocean biogeochemical model. Overall, our model does a good job in reproducing measurements with a correlation coefficient of 〉0.7 in the surface and 〉0.5 at depth. We find that continental margins are the dominant source of cobalt, with a crucial role played by supply under low bottom‐water oxygen conditions. The basin‐scale distribution of cobalt supplied from margins is facilitated by the activity of manganese‐oxidizing bacteria being suppressed under low oxygen and low temperatures, which extends the residence time of cobalt. Overall, we find a residence time of 7 and 250 years in the upper 250 m and global ocean, respectively. Importantly, we find that the dominant internal resupply process switches from regeneration and recycling of particulate cobalt to dissolution of scavenged cobalt between the upper ocean and the ocean interior. Our model highlights key regions of the ocean where biological activity may be most sensitive to cobalt availability.
    Description: EC | H2020 | H2020 Priority Excellent Science | H2020 European Research Council (ERC) Grant Number: 724289; Natural Environment Research Council (NERC) Grant Number: NE/N001079/1; Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation Grant Number: 3738; NSF OCE Grant Numbers: 0929919, 0752832, 0649639, 0223378, 1658030, 1736599; NERC Grant Number: NE/N001079/1; European Research Council Grant Number: 724289
    Keywords: Biogeochemistry ; Trace elements ; Modeling
    Repository Name: Woods Hole Open Access Server
    Type: Article
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