125 resultados para Denitrification And Phosphorus Removal (sndpr)
em Publishing Network for Geoscientific
Resumo:
A complex study of influence of various environmental factors on rates of oxygen (M_O2 ), ammonium (M_NH4), and phosphate (M_PO4) metabolism in Ahnfeltia tobuchiensis has been carried out in situ in the Izmena Bay of the Kunashir Island. The following environmental factors have been included into the investigation: photosynthetically active radiation (PAR); ammonium (NH4); phosphate (PO4); and contents of carbon (C), nitrogen (N), phosphorus (P), and chlorophyll a (Chl) in tissue. Population of agar-containing seaweed A. tobuchiensis forms a layer with thickness up to 0.5 m, which occupies about 23.3 km**2; biomass is equal to 125000 tons. Quantitative assessment of organic matter production and nutrient consumption during oxygen metabolism has been carried out for the whole population. It has been shown that daily oxygen metabolism depends on PAR intensity, concentrations of PO4 and NH4 in seawater, and contents of N and P in tissues (r**2=0.78, p<0.001). Average daily NH4 consumption is 0.21 µmol/g of dry weight/hour and depends on NH4 and O2 concentrations in seawater and on ? and Chl a contents in algal tissues (r**2=0.64, p<0.001). Average daily PO4 consumption is 0.01 µmol/g of dry weight/hour and depends on NH4 concentrations in seawater and on P contents in algal tissues (r**2=0.40, p<0.001).
Resumo:
In the literature, an inconsistency exists between estimates of biotically-effected carbon export inferred from large-scale geochemical studies (Jenkins 1982; 47 gC m-2 a-1) and local measurements of turbulent nutrient supply (Lewis et al. 1986; 4 gC m-2 a-1) in the eastern subtropical North Atlantic. Nutrient supply to the upper ocean by turbulent mixing is reexamined using local standard oceanographic measurements and high-resolution vertical profiles of nutrients averaged over a large region directly comparable to that investigated by Jenkins (1982). Turbulent fluxes induced by internal waves and salt fingering, respectively, are separated according to Gregg (1989) and Zhang et al. (1998). Nutrient transport into the nutrient-consuming surface layer by salt fingering is more than fivefold higher than transport due to internal-wave induced turbulence. Still, this cannot resolve the above- mentioned apparent inconsistency, even if additional physical transport mechanisms such as eddy pumping, advection and horizontal diffusion are accounted for. Estimated nitrate fluxes due to vertical turbulent diffusion are 0.05-0.15 mol m-2 a-1, corresponding to 4-11 gC m-2 a-1. Observed NO3/PO4 turbulent flux ratios of up to 23 are interpreted as the imprint of N2 fixation.
Resumo:
We present a detailed study of the co-diagenesis of Fe and P in hydrothermal plume fallout sediments from ~19°S on the southern East Pacific Rise. Three distal sediment cores from 340-1130 km from the ridge crest, collected during DSDP Leg 92, were analysed for solid phase Fe and P associations using sequential chemical extraction techniques. The sediments at all sites are enriched in hydrothermal Fe (oxyhydr)oxides, but during diagenesis a large proportion of the primary ferrihydrite precipitates are transformed to the more stable mineral form of goethite and to a lesser extent to clay minerals, resulting in the release to solution of scavenged P. However, a significant proportion of this P is retained within the sediment, by incorporation into secondary goethite, by precipitation as authigenic apatite, and by readsorption to Fe (oxyhydr)oxides. Molar P/Fe ratios for these sediments are significantly lower than those measured in plume particles from more northern localities along the southern East Pacific Rise, and show a distinct downcore decrease to a depth of ~12 m. Molar P/Fe ratios are then relatively constant to a depth of ~35 m. The Fe and P speciation data indicate that diagenetic modification of the sediments is largely complete by a depth of 2.5 m, and thus depth trends in molar P/Fe ratios can not solely be explained by losses of P from the sediment by diffusion to the overlying water column during early diagenesis. Instead, these sediments are likely recording changes in dissolved P concentrations off the SEPR, possibly as a result of redistribution of nutrients in response to changes in oceanic circulation over the last 10 million years. Furthermore, the relatively low molar P/Fe ratios observed throughout these sediments are not necessarily solely due to losses of scavenged P by diffusion to the overlying water column during diagenesis, but may also reflect post-depositional oxidation of pyrite originating from the volatile-rich vents of the southern East Pacific Rise. This study suggests that the molar P/Fe ratio of oxic Fe-rich sediments may serve as a proxy of relative changes in paleoseawater phosphate concentrations, particularly if Fe sulfide minerals are not an important component during transport and deposition.