Ocean life depends on single circulation pattern
in Southern Hemisphere
Princeton University
A study has shown that marine life around the world is surprisingly dependent
on a single ocean circulation pattern in the Southern Hemisphere where
nutrient-rich water rises from the deep and spreads across the seas.
The results suggest that ocean life may be more sensitive to climate
change than previously believed because most global warming predictions
indicate that major ocean circulation patterns will change. While oceanographers
have identified many ocean circulation patterns, the study found that
three-quarters of all biological activity in the oceans relies on this
single pattern.
"When we shut off this one pathway in our models, biological
productivity in the oceans drops to one-quarter of what it is today,"
said Jorge Sarmiento, a Princeton oceanographer who led the study published
in the Jan. 1, 2004, issue of Nature. Marine organisms account for half
all biological productivity on Earth.
The discovery helps oceanographers settle a longstanding question about
what keeps the world's oceans fertile. Most biological
activity in the ocean is concentrated near the
surface where an abundance of microorganisms perform
photosynthesis and support marine food chains.
These organisms and their byproducts slowly sink
from the surface, decomposing along the way and
carrying
nutrients to the deep ocean. Until now, it has not been clear how the
surface becomes replenished with the nutrients that seemed lost to the
deep ocean.
Previous research has shown that ocean water does not mix well across
layers of equal density, which are mostly oriented horizontally in the
ocean. Once the organic matter sinks to the abyss, it takes a long time
for nutrients to cross the layers and return to the surface. Without a
mechanism to bring deep water back to the surface, the oceans would lose
about one-fiftieth of their nutrients to this sinking process each year,
Sarmiento said.
Sarmiento and colleagues identified what amounts to an enormous conveyor
belt that carries nutrient-rich seawater southward in the deep ocean,
brings it to the surface in the Antarctic Ocean where the density layer
barrier is weak and ships it north. The water sinks again in the Northern
Hemisphere and starts over. The researchers discovered a chemical signature
(the presence of high nitrate and low silicate levels) that is unique
to this nutrient carrier, which is called the Subantarctic Mode Water,
and used it to trace the influence of this water in surface waters around
the world.
"It is really quite amazing," said Sarmiento. "I
had no idea of the extent of its influence."
The SAMW is responsible for feeding nearly all the world's oceans, except
for the North Pacific, which is resupplied with nutrients through another
circulation pattern, the researchers found.
The finding already has attracted interest among oceanographers. "They
have clearly identified the pathway that counteracts the so-called biological
pump, which acts to strip the surface layer of its nutrients,"
said Arnold Gordon of Columbia University. "One now wonders how
global change will alter the efficiency of this pathway."
Sarmiento said the research group "is now hard at work investigating
the details of this nutrient circulation pattern with an eye to examining
how it might respond to global warming in model simulations."
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