6 june 2011ace workshop 1 ocean productivity: concepts and measurements john marra brooklyn college,...

30
6 June 2011 ACE workshop 1 Ocean Productivity: Concepts and Measurements John Marra Brooklyn College, CUNY

Upload: madison-kelly

Post on 17-Jan-2016

217 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: 6 June 2011ACE workshop 1 Ocean Productivity: Concepts and Measurements John Marra Brooklyn College, CUNY

6 June 2011 ACE workshop 1

Ocean Productivity:Concepts and Measurements

John MarraBrooklyn College, CUNY

Page 2: 6 June 2011ACE workshop 1 Ocean Productivity: Concepts and Measurements John Marra Brooklyn College, CUNY

6 June 2011 ACE workshop 2

The Major Goal of Biological Oceanography:

“…determination of time-varying plankton productivity in the world

ocean…”

-Barber and Hilting (2002)

Page 3: 6 June 2011ACE workshop 1 Ocean Productivity: Concepts and Measurements John Marra Brooklyn College, CUNY

6 June 2011 ACE workshop 3

• Productivity• Autotrophs, heterotrophs• New production• Export Production

Concepts

Page 4: 6 June 2011ACE workshop 1 Ocean Productivity: Concepts and Measurements John Marra Brooklyn College, CUNY

6 June 2011 ACE workshop 4

Rate of photosynthesis Gross primary production, GPP

GPP - autotrophic respiration Net primary production, NPP

NPP - heterotrophic respiration Net community production, NCP

Export Production, EP, the amount of NCP exported (sinking, mixing, ZP vertical migration) to depth

Productivity Defined

Process Ecological Term

-

-

-

New Production, NP, the fraction of NPP supported by ‘new’ nutrients, and available for export

Page 5: 6 June 2011ACE workshop 1 Ocean Productivity: Concepts and Measurements John Marra Brooklyn College, CUNY

6 June 2011 ACE workshop 5

Photosynthesis

Carbon dioxide

Water Sugars Oxygen+ +

The Photosynthetic Quotient, or PQ is the amount of oxygen evolved relative to the carbon fixed into organic matter

Page 6: 6 June 2011ACE workshop 1 Ocean Productivity: Concepts and Measurements John Marra Brooklyn College, CUNY

6 June 2011 ACE workshop 6

Synthesis of Energy from Light

Page 7: 6 June 2011ACE workshop 1 Ocean Productivity: Concepts and Measurements John Marra Brooklyn College, CUNY

6 June 2011 ACE workshop 7

Productivity Measurements

• Two choices: – Fluxes from in situ dynamics– Fluxes occurring in bottles

• Each has advantages and disadvantages

Page 8: 6 June 2011ACE workshop 1 Ocean Productivity: Concepts and Measurements John Marra Brooklyn College, CUNY

6 June 2011 ACE workshop 8

The kind of ‘container’

Very physically dynamic in situ volume Very non-dynamic volume

Page 9: 6 June 2011ACE workshop 1 Ocean Productivity: Concepts and Measurements John Marra Brooklyn College, CUNY

6 June 2011 ACE workshop 9

OxygenCO2 + H2O -> CH2O + O2

The change in oxygen content in a defined quantity of water is the most straightforward measure of Net Community Production.

The problems: 1. All too frequently, the change is negative

(NCP <0) over 12 or 24 h;2. Requires an accurate air-sea exchange

Page 10: 6 June 2011ACE workshop 1 Ocean Productivity: Concepts and Measurements John Marra Brooklyn College, CUNY

6 June 2011 ACE workshop 10

18Oxygen

CO2 + H218O -> CH2O + 18O2

A good estimate of Gross Primary Production, but may be influenced by the Mehler reaction, or other oxygen consuming reactions within the phytoplankton cell.

Page 11: 6 June 2011ACE workshop 1 Ocean Productivity: Concepts and Measurements John Marra Brooklyn College, CUNY

6 June 2011 ACE workshop 11

CarbonCO2 + H2O -> CH2O + O2

• It’s carbon! (no worries about value of the the photosynthetic quotient), but…

• Precision is too low for most open ocean work

Page 12: 6 June 2011ACE workshop 1 Ocean Productivity: Concepts and Measurements John Marra Brooklyn College, CUNY

6 June 2011 ACE workshop 12

14Carbon

• Basis of virtually all satellite algorithms for productivity• Incubation from dawn-dusk very close to Net Primary

Production• Characteristics invite methodological abuse and carelessness

– Easy– Extremely Sensitive– Always gives a ‘positive’ answer

14CO2 + H2O -> 14CH2O + O2

Page 13: 6 June 2011ACE workshop 1 Ocean Productivity: Concepts and Measurements John Marra Brooklyn College, CUNY

6 June 2011 ACE workshop 13

“…the results of the 14C method fall somewhere between the net phytoplankton production and total

photosynthesis, but exact evaluation of the meaning of the experiments will require an extensive experimental

programme”

G. A. Riley (ca. 1954)

Page 14: 6 June 2011ACE workshop 1 Ocean Productivity: Concepts and Measurements John Marra Brooklyn College, CUNY

6 June 2011 ACE workshop 14

Productivity has known limits1. Growth rate as a function of temperature (Eppley,1972) 2. The

maximum rate of photo-synthesis normalized to chlorophyll-a, Pb

max, will be ≤ 25(Falkowski, 1981)

3. The quantum yield. 8 quanta of light are required to evolve 1 mol O2, thus, the quantum yield will be < 0.1 (in practice)(e.g., Bannister and Weidemann, 1983)

Page 15: 6 June 2011ACE workshop 1 Ocean Productivity: Concepts and Measurements John Marra Brooklyn College, CUNY

6 June 2011 ACE workshop 15

Biomass: Changes in POC

• Good for estimating particle production

• Doesn’t measure DOC production

• There are many more optically-based measurements of production in development

Page 16: 6 June 2011ACE workshop 1 Ocean Productivity: Concepts and Measurements John Marra Brooklyn College, CUNY

6 June 2011 ACE workshop 16

Comparing Fluxes: In Situ and in Containers

Page 17: 6 June 2011ACE workshop 1 Ocean Productivity: Concepts and Measurements John Marra Brooklyn College, CUNY

6 June 2011 ACE workshop 17

The JGOFS North Atlantic Bloom Experiment, Spring 1989

Over 13 days (mixed layer):• Production = 970

mmols C m-2

• Total increase in POC = 520 mmols C m-2

• Trap flux = 507 mmols C m-2

• (234Th estimates are about half the trap flux.)

m

Page 18: 6 June 2011ACE workshop 1 Ocean Productivity: Concepts and Measurements John Marra Brooklyn College, CUNY

6 June 2011 ACE workshop 18

N interacts with C in the concept of New Production

NO3

N2

• The amount of production fueled by NO3 or N2 and called the f-ratio

• Best for temperate, and high-latitude areas subject to seasonal mixing, and supply of NO3 from depth

• A good way to evaluate the quantity of production exported to depth

Page 19: 6 June 2011ACE workshop 1 Ocean Productivity: Concepts and Measurements John Marra Brooklyn College, CUNY

6 June 2011 ACE workshop 19

Page 20: 6 June 2011ACE workshop 1 Ocean Productivity: Concepts and Measurements John Marra Brooklyn College, CUNY

6 June 2011 ACE workshop 20

Export Production in Time

‘bottom up’ regulation

‘top down’ regulation

grazing

Page 21: 6 June 2011ACE workshop 1 Ocean Productivity: Concepts and Measurements John Marra Brooklyn College, CUNY

6 June 2011 ACE workshop 21

Export Flux to Depth

Page 22: 6 June 2011ACE workshop 1 Ocean Productivity: Concepts and Measurements John Marra Brooklyn College, CUNY

6 June 2011 ACE workshop 22

The role of Iron

Boyd et al., 2007

Page 23: 6 June 2011ACE workshop 1 Ocean Productivity: Concepts and Measurements John Marra Brooklyn College, CUNY

6 June 2011 ACE workshop 23

Next steps: What we don’t know

• Production and dynamics of dissolved organic matter (DOM)

• Respiration and its components• The depth of the Euphotic Zone• Production in large, permeable, diffusive

containers in terms of small, impermeable ones, and vice versa

Page 24: 6 June 2011ACE workshop 1 Ocean Productivity: Concepts and Measurements John Marra Brooklyn College, CUNY

6 June 2011 ACE workshop 24

DOM

Mixing/advection

hydrolysis/ diagenesis

Riverine inputs

solubilization, grazing,exudation, lysis,

Net PrimaryProduction

EXCHANGE

OPEN OCEANCOASTAL OCEAN

DOM

solubilization, grazing,exudation, lysis,

adapted from Moore 1999

CO2

DIC

SEDIMENTS

Dissolved Organic Matter

DOMlong term C reservoir

Mixing/Advection DIC

Surface

Deep

Net PrimaryProduction

CDOMCDOM

CDOM

Page 25: 6 June 2011ACE workshop 1 Ocean Productivity: Concepts and Measurements John Marra Brooklyn College, CUNY

6 June 2011 ACE workshop 25

Phytoplankton Primary Production

DOM

CO2

Bacterial remineralization

extracellular release, grazing, lysis, solubilization

inorganic compounds

CO2

Bacterial remineralization

Advection

Lateral transport

bioavailability

• Estimated that 50% of primary production routed through dissolved fraction

• Not typically measured in measurements of productivity

– O2 evolution/CO2 consumption will include it,

– 14C uptake may not– Won’t be measured in particle production methods

• Ultimately comes from photosynthesis (like everything else)• Utilization of labile DOC will be as rapid as photosynthetic production

Export to deeper waters & sediments through aggregate and particulate sinking

Page 26: 6 June 2011ACE workshop 1 Ocean Productivity: Concepts and Measurements John Marra Brooklyn College, CUNY

6 June 2011 ACE workshop 26

AUTOTROPH BACTERIAL

RESPIRATION

DISSOLVED ORGANIC MATTER

EUPHOTIC DEPTH

Page 27: 6 June 2011ACE workshop 1 Ocean Productivity: Concepts and Measurements John Marra Brooklyn College, CUNY

6 June 2011 ACE workshop 27

Global Ocean Productivity Through the ‘Ages’

Page 28: 6 June 2011ACE workshop 1 Ocean Productivity: Concepts and Measurements John Marra Brooklyn College, CUNY

6 June 2011 ACE workshop 28

Page 29: 6 June 2011ACE workshop 1 Ocean Productivity: Concepts and Measurements John Marra Brooklyn College, CUNY

6 June 2011 ACE workshop 29

Cast of Characters

Page 30: 6 June 2011ACE workshop 1 Ocean Productivity: Concepts and Measurements John Marra Brooklyn College, CUNY

6 June 2011 ACE workshop 30