The global marine phosphorus cycle : sensitivity to oceanic circulation
Publication date
2007
Authors
Slomp, C.P.
Van Cappellen, P.
Editors
Advisors
Supervisors
DOI
Document Type
Article
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(c) UU Universiteit Utrecht, 2007
Abstract
A new mass balance model for the coupled marine cycles of phosphorus (P) and carbon (C) is used to examine the relationships between oceanic circulation, primary
productivity, and sedimentary burial of reactive P and particulate
organic C (POC), on geological time scales. The model explicitly represents the exchanges of water and particulate
matter between the continental shelves and the open ocean, and it accounts for the redox-dependent burial of POC and
the various forms of reactive P (iron(III)-bound P, particulate organic P (POP), authigenic calcium phosphate, and fish
debris). Steady state and transient simulations indicate that
a slowing down of global ocean circulation decreases primary
production in the open ocean, but increases that in the coastal ocean. The latter is due to increased transfer of soluble
P from deep ocean water to the shelves, where it fuels
primary production and causes increased reactive P burial.
While authigenic calcium phosphate accounts for most reactive
P burial ocean-wide, enhanced preservation of fish debris
may become an important reactive P sink in deep-sea
sediments during periods of ocean anoxia. Slower ocean circulation
globally increases POC burial, because of enhanced
POC preservation under anoxia in deep-sea depositional environments
and higher primary productivity along the continental
margins. In accordance with geological evidence, the
model predicts increased accumulation of reactive P on the
continental shelves during and following periods of ocean
anoxia.
Keywords
Geowetenschappen en aanverwante (milieu)wetenschappen