Charria, G.; Dadou, I.; Llido, J.; Drevillon, M.; Garcon, V.. 2008 Importance of dissolved organic nitrogen in the north Atlantic Ocean in sustaining primary production: a 3-D modelling approach. Biogeosciences, 5 (5). 1437-1455.
Abstract
An eddy-permitting coupled ecosystemcirculation
model including dissolved organic matter is used
to estimate the dissolved organic nitrogen (DON) supply sustaining
primary production in the subtropical north Atlantic
Ocean.
After an analysis of the coupled model performances compared
to the data, a sensitivity study demonstrates the strong
impact of parameter values linked to the hydrolysis of particulate
organic nitrogen and remineralisation of dissolved
organic nitrogen on surface biogeochemical concentrations.
The physical transport of dissolved organic nitrogen contributes
to maintain the level of primary production in
this subtropical gyre. It is dominated by the meridional
component. We estimate a meridional net input of
0.039 molNm−2 yr−1 over the domain (13–35 N and 71–
40 W) in the subtropical gyre. This supply is driven by
the Ekman transport in the southern part and by non-Ekman
transport (meridional current components, eddies, meanders
and fronts) in the northern part of the subtropical gyre. At
12 N, our estimate (18 kmolN s−1) confirms the estimation
(17.9 kmolN s−1) made by Roussenov et al. (2006) using a
simplified biogeochemical model in a large scale model. This
DON meridional input is within the range (from 0.05 up
to 0.24 molNm−2 yr−1) (McGillicuddy and Robinson, 1997;
Oschlies, 2002) of all other possible mechanisms (mesoscale
activity, nitrogen fixation, atmospheric deposition) fuelling
primary production in the subtropical gyre. The present
study confirms that the lateral supply of dissolved organic
nitrogen might be important in closing the N budget over the
north Atlantic Ocean and quantifies the importance of meridional
input of dissolved organic nitrogen.
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