Carbon, oxygen and biological productivity in the Southern Ocean in and out the Kerguelen plume: CARIOCA drifter results

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Abstract

The Kerguelen Plateau region in the Indian sector of the Southern Ocean supports annually a large-scale phytoplankton bloom which is naturally fertilized with iron. As part of the second Kerguelen Ocean and Plateau compared Study expedition (KEOPS2) in austral spring (October-November 2011), one CARbon Interface OCean Atmosphere (CARIOCA) buoy was deployed east of the Kerguelen Plateau. It drifted eastward downstream along the Kerguelen plume. Hourly surface measurements of CO 2, O 2 and ancillary observations were collected between 1 November 2011 and 12 February 2012 with the aim of characterizing the spatial and temporal variability of the biological net community production, NCP, downstream the Kerguelen Plateau, assessing the impact of iron-induced productivity on the biological inorganic carbon consumption and consequently on the CO 2 flux exchanged at the air-sea interface. The trajectory of the buoy up to mid-December was within the longitude range 72-83° E, close to the polar front and then in the polar frontal zone, PFZ, up to 97° E. From 17 November to 16 December, the buoy drifted within the Kerguelen plume following a filament carrying dissolved iron, DFe, for a total distance of 700 km. In the first part of the trajectory of the buoy, within the iron plume, the ocean surface waters were always a sink for CO 2 and a source for O 2, with fluxes of respective mean values equal to -8 mmol CO 2 and +38 mmol O 2 m -2 d -1. To the east, as the buoy escaped the iron-enriched filament, the fluxes were in the opposite direction, with respective mean values of +5 mmol CO 2 and -48 mmol O 2 m -2 d -1. These numbers clearly indicate the strong impact of biological processes on the biogeochemistry in the surface waters within the Kerguelen plume in November-mid-December, while it is undetectable to the east in the PFZ from mid- December to mid-February. While the buoy follows the Fe-enriched filament, simultaneous observations of dissolved inorganic carbon (DIC) and dissolved oxygen (O 2) highlight biological events lasting from 2 to 4 days. Stoichiometric ratios, O 2 / C, between 1.1 and 1.4 are observed indicating new and regenerated production regimes. NCP estimates range from 60 to 140 mmol C m -2 d -1.

Figures

  • Figure 1. Trajectory followed by the CARIOCA drifter from 1 November 2011 to 12 February 2012 (red line). The green dots and numbers indicate the location and date where the data indicate a large signature of biological effects. The grey diamonds indicate high isolated salinity anomalies. The buoy enters the polar frontal zone at the location of the blue arrow. The pink dotted line represents the location of the subantarctic front, the blue dashed line shows the location of the polar front (Park and Vivier, 2009, 2011) and the black line, the location of the polar front based on KEOPS2 observations, PF_Park (Park et al., 2014). The black dots indicate the location of the KEOPS2 stations (TEW-7, TEW-8, NPF-L) close to the PF.
  • Table 1. Difference between the extrema of DIC and O2 measured in the warm surface layer (columns 4 and 6). In bold, mean values of DIC and O2 changes over consecutive mornings (columns 5 and 7), CO2 and O2 air–sea flux (columns 8 and 9) are shown.
  • Figure 2. Diurnal cycles of SST, DIC and O2 from 30 November to 4 December 2011. (a) SST (◦C) (black, left vertical axis) and DIC (µmol kg−1) (grey, right vertical axis). The vertical dashed lines indicate the time of sunrise (blue) and sunset (orange). (b) O2 (µmol kg−1) (black, left vertical axis) and DIC (grey, right vertical axis).
  • Table 2. Biological changes (columns 2 and 4) and air–sea flux changes (columns 3 and 5) of DIC and O2. Calculated values of NCP carbon and NCP oxygen (columns 6 and 7). In bold, mean values over consecutive mornings.
  • Figure 3. Spatial extent of phytoplankton blooms over and downstream from the Kerguelen Plateau as revealed by satellite ocean color on 6 selected days, between 11 November and 28 December 2011. The trajectory followed by the CARIOCA drifter is superposed on the chlorophyll patches (black line). The circles indicate the location of the buoy the same days.
  • Figure 4. Lagrangian perspectives on large-scale natural iron fertilization on the Kerguelen Plateau and in the downstream plume: a snapshot on 25 November 2011. The color coding indicates the time in days since leaving the plateau for each water parcel (d’Ovidio et al., 2015). The white line indicates the trajectory of the CARIOCA drifter from 1 November to 31 December 2011. The cyan dots indicate the locations where carbon NCP estimates are calculated. The cyan square is the position of the buoy on 16 November (see text).
  • Figure 5. Buoy data from 1 November 2011 to 12 February 2012. (a) Temperature in ◦C (black, left vertical axis) and salinity (grey, right vertical axis). (b) Temperature–salinity diagram: 1 to 11 November, black diamonds; 12 November to 16 December, grey diamonds; 17 December to 12 February, black squares. (c) pCO2 measured at a depth of 2 m in µatm (black) and in the atmosphere in µatm (grey). (d) Dissolved oxygen concentration measured at a depth of 2 m in µmol kg−1 (black, left vertical axis) and oxygen saturation in % (grey, right vertical axis). In Fig. 5a, the cyan dashed lines indicate 12 November and 16 December (see text). In Fig. 5b, the red dots indicate the data measured at the KEOPS2 stations TEW7, TEW8, F-L.
  • Figure 7. Distribution of O2 in µmol kg −1 (black, left vertical axis) and DIC in µmol kg−1 (grey, right vertical axis) between 1 November 2011 and 12 February 2012. The purple dots and lines indicate the periods when NCP estimates have been made. The cyan dashed lines indicate 12 November and 16 December and the cyan arrow 16 November (see text).

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Merlivat, L., Boutin, J., & D’Ovidio, F. (2015). Carbon, oxygen and biological productivity in the Southern Ocean in and out the Kerguelen plume: CARIOCA drifter results. Biogeosciences, 12(11), 3513–3524. https://doi.org/10.5194/bg-12-3513-2015

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