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Atlantic Ocean nitrate transport

The availability of nitrogen in the euphotic zone is an important, potentially limiting factor for productivity and the biological sequestration of carbon in the ocean. There are three principal routes by which new nitrogen makes its way into the euphotic zone of the Atlantic Ocean Physical transport of nitrate, nitrogen fixation by diazotrophic organisms, and aeolian transport and deposition. [Pg.609]

On balance, the shelves are not a net source of N to the open ocean. Instead, the North Atlantic has major exchanges with the Arctic Ocean and with the South Atlantic. Ganachaud and Wunsch (2002) estimate southerly nitrate fluxes of 2200 (+/- 3800) and 6600 (+/- 4700) x 10 mol N year- at 7.5°N and 4.5°S, respectively. We take their mid point value of 4400 (+/— 4000) X 10 mol N year as the net transport of nitrate from the North Atlantic to the South Atlantic. A significant uncertainty lies in the net meridional transport of DON in the basinwide N transport budgets in the Atlantic. Rintoul and Wunsch (1991) speculated that the imbalance they quantified in the poleward nitrate flux across subtropical sections may be compensated by unobserved fluxes of organic nitrogen. DON measurements are stiU too sparse and too imprecise to test this hypothesis. [Pg.621]


See other pages where Atlantic Ocean nitrate transport is mentioned: [Pg.252]    [Pg.210]    [Pg.192]    [Pg.96]    [Pg.282]    [Pg.583]    [Pg.598]    [Pg.609]    [Pg.611]    [Pg.2885]    [Pg.209]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.192 , Pg.193 ]




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Ocean Transport

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