Stable carbon and nitrogen isotopes as indicators for organic matter sources in the Kara Sea
โ Scribed by Birgit Nagel; Birgit Gaye; Lyudmila A. Kodina; Niko Lahajnar
- Publisher
- Elsevier Science
- Year
- 2009
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 650 KB
- Volume
- 266
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0025-3227
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
โฆ Synopsis
13
C ฮด 15 N Kara Sea paleoclimate Ob Yenisei Stable carbon and nitrogen isotope ratios (ฮด 13 C, ฮด 15 N) are frequently used to decipher organic matter sources and transformation processes. Here, we present stable isotope data of suspended matter and sediments from the Ob and Yenisei estuaries and the Kara Sea (Arctic Ocean) in order to figure out how they are influenced by seasonal and interannual changes in river run-off, ice coverage, and biological activity. Our study shows a progressive increase of stable carbon and nitrogen isotopic ratios in offshore direction and a positive correlation of salinity with ฮด 13 C. Differences among the correlation of individual annual suspended-matter data sets reveal a multitude of processes modulating ฮด 13 C ratios such as sporadic plankton blooms, variations in riverine end-members and annual river run-off. Despite this variability the correlation of salinity with ฮด 13 C of suspended matter from the surface water is very similar to that of surface sediments with the average salinity of the ice-free period. However, sediments show a shift to higher ฮด 13 C values by about 2.2โฐ. Since sinking particles in deep water are similar to sedimentary ฮด 13 C ratios, the correlation of salinity with ฮด 13 C of sediments has been taken to reconstruct the paleosalinity of a sediment core off the Yenisei river mouth since 10,000 yr BP.
๐ SIMILAR VOLUMES
The transfer of dissolved organic carbon (DOC) and nitrogen (DON) out of the surface ocean where it is produced to storage in the ocean's interior creates one of the largest reservoirs of reduced carbon and organic nitrogen on earth. In nutrient-depleted surface waters of the oligotrophic ocean, dis