Award: OCE-1736599

Award Title: US GEOTRACES PMT: Cobalt Biogeochemical Cycling and Connections to Metalloenzymes in the Pacific Ocean
Funding Source: NSF Division of Ocean Sciences (NSF OCE)
Program Manager: Henrietta N. Edmonds

Outcomes Report

Metal are highly scarce in seawater, yet they are important for nutrition of marine ecosystems, and can influence marine carbon cycling. In this project we analyzed the distribution of dissolved cobalt and labile cobalt across the North and Central Pacific Ocean as part of the GEOTRACES program on the GP15 section. The meridonial section provides an exciting view of a number of processes that influence the distribution of cobalt including hydrothermal inputs, sedimentary and coastal inputs, scavenging in intermediate waters, and scarcity in surface waters. The Pacific transect suggests a substantial source of cobalt to the North Pacific basin along the Alaskan Shelf associated with a low salinity waters. Elevated concentrations of total and labile cobalt within oxygen minimum zones in the Equatorial North and South Pacific are likely due to the reduction of manganese oxide particles and release of incorporated cobalt. Additionally, increased cobalt concentrations above the Lō’ihi Seamount suggests a local hydrothermal source of dissolved cobalt. Low concentrations of cobalt are found in the surface ocean where cobalt is used as a nutrient for phytoplankton, particularly in the oligotrophic gyres. At depth, cobalt is depleted relative to phosphate throughout the transect, revealing a strong scavenging removal process in the deep Pacific. A number of parallel studies were conducted that contributed to our understanding of the biogeochemical interactions between metals and microbes in the Pacific Ocean and the Arctic Ocean. These included the discovery of abundant metal-containing enzymes that are involved in the transformation of nitrogen in the low oxygen waters of the oceans using new protein measurement techniques. A study of diatoms isolated in the North Pacific found they are particularly efficient at replacing cobalt for zinc, and this likely reflects the higher abundance of cobalt in the North Pacific environment. A study was conducted that compared the minimum requirement of cobalt within the abundant cyanobacterium Prochlorococcus at 60 atoms per cell, using both metal and protein analysis of Co requiring proteins. This last study compared these requirements to a GEOTRACES compliant cobalt section in the Central Pacific Ocean from the METZYME expedition and to a global Co biogeochemical model. Together this grant contributed to our understanding of the biogeochemical cycling of cobalt and other metals in the Pacific Ocean environment. Last Modified: 05/23/2020 Submitted by: Mak A Saito
DatasetLatest Version DateCurrent State
Nitrite Oxidoreductase targeted metaproteomics from R/V Kilo Moana cruise KM1128 and R/V Falkor cruise FK160115 in the Central Pacific Ocean in 2011 and 20162020-04-21Final no updates expected
Metal quotas of NE Pacific and Altantic diatom isolates measured via ICP-MS after growth in zinc and cobalt media amendments in experiments with cultures collected from R/V Thomas G. Thompson cruise TN280, along Line P in the NE Pacific, in May of 20122020-03-31Final no updates expected
Growth rates NE Pacific and Atlantic diatom isolates under various Zn and Co additions in experiments with cultures collected from R/V Thomas G. Thompson cruise TN280, along Line P in the NE Pacific, in May of 2012.2020-03-31Final no updates expected
Whole cellular metal quotas, metal to phosphorous ratios, and metal to carbon ratios of Pseudoalteromonas sp. strain BB2-AT2 cultures originally collected from Scripps Pier, California coast in 19952020-04-20Preliminary and in progress
Cytosolic metallome data of the metalloproteome of Pseudoalteromonas sp. strain BB2-AT2 cultures originally collected from Scripps Pier, California coast in 19952020-04-08Preliminary and in progress
Metalloproteome protein data of the metalloproteome of Pseudoalteromonas sp. strain BB2-AT2 cultures originally collected from Scripps Pier, California coast in 19952020-04-08Data not available
Dissolved Cobalt and Labile Cobalt from Leg 1 (Seattle, WA to Hilo, HI) of the US GEOTRACES Pacific Meridional Transect (PMT) cruise (GP15, RR1814) on R/V Roger Revelle from September to October 20182021-05-05Final no updates expected
Dissolved Cobalt and Labile Cobalt from Leg 2 (Hilo, HI to Papeete, French Polynesia) of the US GEOTRACES Pacific Meridional Transect (PMT) cruise (GP15, RR1815) on R/V Roger Revelle from October to November 20182020-07-15Final no updates expected
Dissolved cobalt, nutrients, and hydrography from the Pacific ProteOMZ Expedition, FK160115, on R/V Falkor in 20162020-11-25Final no updates expected
Growth rates of the polar diatom Chaetoceros RS19 under various +Zn and +Co conditions from September 2019 (MM Saito project)2021-08-31Final no updates expected
Metal quotas (ratios of Metal:P) of the polar diatom Chaetoceros sp. RS19 in +Zn and +Co incubation studies from January 2020 (MM Saito project)2021-08-30Final no updates expected
Metal uptake rates of the polar diatom Chaetoceros RS19 in +Zn and +Co incubation studies from January 2020 (MM Saito project)2021-08-30Final no updates expected

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Principal Investigator: Mak A. Saito (Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution)