Zooplankton fecal pellet flux and carbon export: The South China Sea record and its global comparison

IF 4 1区 地球科学 Q1 GEOGRAPHY, PHYSICAL Global and Planetary Change Pub Date : 2024-11-26 DOI:10.1016/j.gloplacha.2024.104657
Jiaying Li, Zhifei Liu, Baozhi Lin, Yulong Zhao, Xiaodong Zhang, Junyuan Cao, Jingwen Zhang, Hongzhe Song
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Abstract

Zooplankton fecal pellets constitute a major component of passively sinking particles in the ocean. The sinking of zooplankton fecal pellets provides an efficient vehicle for the transfer and sequestration of particulate organic carbon (POC) in the deep sea, which has been widely reported in different regions. However, most existing studies focus on the sinking flux of fecal pellets within the upper ocean, while lower mesopelagic and bathypelagic zones are rarely investigated. Here, we report the spatiotemporal flux variation of zooplankton fecal pellets collected by two sediment traps deployed in mesopelagic and bathypelagic zones (500 m and 2190 m, respectively) of the South China Sea from June 2020 to May 2022, and compare it with deep-sea (>500 m) fecal pellet flux data reported in the global ocean. In the South China Sea, fecal pellet fluxes display distinct seasonal patterns due to the control of the East Asian monsoon system, with higher fluxes in winter and spring, and lower fluxes in summer and autumn. Small fecal pellets (width < 100 μm) dominate the overall pellet numerical flux (more than 98 %), while rare large pellets (width > 100 μm) account for averaging 20 % of fecal pellet carbon flux. Both large and small pellet fluxes appear to be higher at 2190 m, mainly due to the in-situ reworking and repackaging of deep-dwelling zooplankton communities, as well as the input of lateral advection from high productive continental coasts and shelves. Identifiable zooplankton fecal pellets constitute approximately 10 % to the total POC flux in the deep South China Sea. Comparing the eutrophic polar and upwelling regions with mesotrophic and oligotrophic regions, we find a good correlation between marine primary production and fecal pellet carbon export. On the global scale, carbon fluxes through zooplankton fecal pellets to the deep sea are mainly constrained by the grazing impacts of zooplanktons, influenced by temperature, zooplankton biomass, and zooplankton size spectrum.
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浮游动物粪便颗粒通量和碳输出:南海记录及其全球比较
浮游动物粪便颗粒是海洋中被动下沉颗粒的主要组成部分。浮游动物粪便颗粒的下沉为深海颗粒有机碳(POC)的转移和封存提供了有效的载体,这在不同地区得到了广泛的报道。然而,现有的研究大多集中在上层海洋中粪便颗粒的下沉通量,而对下层中深海和深海区域的研究很少。本文报道了2020年6月至2022年5月在南海中远洋和深海(分别为500 m和2190 m)部署的两个沉积物捕集器收集的浮游动物粪便颗粒的时空通量变化,并与全球海洋中深海(>500 m)粪便颗粒通量数据进行了比较。在南海,由于东亚季风系统的控制,粪便颗粒通量表现出明显的季节特征,冬春季通量较高,夏秋季通量较低。小粪粒(宽度<;粒径为100 μm)的颗粒在整体数值通量中占主导地位(98%以上),而罕见的大颗粒(宽度>;100 μm)平均占粪便颗粒碳通量的20%。大颗粒通量和小颗粒通量在2190 m似乎都较高,这主要是由于深海浮游动物群落的原位改造和重新包装,以及来自高产大陆海岸和大陆架的侧向平流的输入。可识别的浮游动物粪便颗粒约占南海深海总POC通量的10%。将富营养区和上升流区与中营养区和少营养区进行比较,发现海洋初级生产与粪便颗粒碳输出具有良好的相关性。在全球尺度上,浮游动物粪球向深海的碳通量主要受浮游动物的放牧影响,受温度、浮游动物生物量和浮游动物粒径谱的影响。
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来源期刊
Global and Planetary Change
Global and Planetary Change 地学天文-地球科学综合
CiteScore
7.40
自引率
10.30%
发文量
226
审稿时长
63 days
期刊介绍: The objective of the journal Global and Planetary Change is to provide a multi-disciplinary overview of the processes taking place in the Earth System and involved in planetary change over time. The journal focuses on records of the past and current state of the earth system, and future scenarios , and their link to global environmental change. Regional or process-oriented studies are welcome if they discuss global implications. Topics include, but are not limited to, changes in the dynamics and composition of the atmosphere, oceans and cryosphere, as well as climate change, sea level variation, observations/modelling of Earth processes from deep to (near-)surface and their coupling, global ecology, biogeography and the resilience/thresholds in ecosystems. Key criteria for the consideration of manuscripts are (a) the relevance for the global scientific community and/or (b) the wider implications for global scale problems, preferably combined with (c) having a significance beyond a single discipline. A clear focus on key processes associated with planetary scale change is strongly encouraged. Manuscripts can be submitted as either research contributions or as a review article. Every effort should be made towards the presentation of research outcomes in an understandable way for a broad readership.
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