Project: Biogeochemical Impact and Fate of Non-phosphorus Membrane Lipids in the Sargasso Sea

Acronym/Short Name:SargassoSeaLipids
Project Duration:2010-09 -2013-08
Geolocation:Sargasso Sea

Description

Intact polar diacyglycerols (IP-DAGs) are the fatty-acid bearing lipid molecules that compose bacterial and eukaryotic cell membranes. As such, they are one of the most abundant classes of lipid molecules in plankton, and play a major role in the marine carbon cycle. However, until very recently, the molecular diversity of IP-DAGs was poorly understood; the structural identity and characteristics of IP-DAGs were inferred almost exclusively from their constituent fatty acids. These non-phosphorus containing IP-DAGs were largely unknown to chemical oceanography. In contrast, phospholipids, which have been the focus of considerable research, compose a disproportionally small fraction of total IP-DAGs. But we still lack even a cursory understanding of biochemical functions and geochemical fates of non-phosphorus IP-DAGs. Given that these molecules are among the most abundant lipid molecules on the planet, this represents a profound and unexpected gap in our understanding the marine carbon and phosphorus cycles.

In this project, researchers at the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution will launch a pioneering study of these poorly understood compounds. Their approach will be guided by four questions: (1) How do non-phosphorus lipids contribute to variations in the C:N:P of particulate organic matter in the Sargasso Sea? (2) What are the relative degradation rates of phospholipids and non-phosphorus lipids in surface waters? (3) Which groups of microbes utilize the carbon and phosphorus from different IP-DAGs? (4) What are the relative contributions of different IP-DAGs to particulate organic matter export to the deep-sea?

These questions will be answered by using sophisticated HPLC/MS analyses and novel isotope tracing approaches in conjunction with long-standing methods for measuring the C:N:P of plankton and determining the degradation rates of organic molecules. The research team will establish whether these newly-recognized sulfolipids and betaine lipids molecules are a quantitatively important biochemical option for phytoplankton to affect flexible C:N:P stoichiometry in the face of nutrient stress. They will also elucidate the degradation rate, microbial fate, and export potential of the carbon and phosphorus from IP-DAGs. This will shed new light on the broader roles of these molecules in the cycling of these elements by the planktonic community.

This project contains components that are specifically designed to meet the NSF criteria for "advancing discovery and understanding while promoting teaching, training and learning." The project will support the training of a graduate student and postdoctoral fellow. In addition, the research team will work with the non-profit Zephyr Foundation in Woods Hole to design educational 'units' based on the team's research that will be tailored to student in grades 6 - 12. The Foundation will present these units as part of their hands-on marine science field trip series that is delivered to over 200 students and their teachers per year.


DatasetLatest Version DateCurrent State
Water column (community) respiration rates from changes in DO in incubations from samples collected on R/V Knorr cruise KN207-01 along the southern tip of Nova Scotia to Bermuda in 2012 (SargassoSeaLipids project)2015-04-16Final no updates expected
Sinking POC and PIC fluxes measured with PIT sediment traps R/V Knorr cruise KN207-01 along the southern tip of Nova Scotia to Bermuda in 2012 (SargassoSeaLipids project)2015-04-15Final no updates expected
Bacterial production data from R/V Knorr cruise KN207-01 along the southern tip of Nova Scotia to Bermuda in 2012 (SargassoSeaLipids project)2015-04-14Final no updates expected
Inorganic nutrients (PO4, SiOH4, NO3, NO2, NH4) from R/V Knorr cruise KN207-01 from the southern tip of Nova Scotia to Bermuda in 2012 (SargassoSeaLipids project)2013-06-28Final no updates expected
Niskin bottle data (including salinity, O2, temperature, conductivity, turbidity) from R/V Knorr cruise KN207-01 in the southern tip of Nova Scotia to Bermuda in 2012 (SargassoSeaLipids project)2012-11-13Final no updates expected
Alongtrack data collected continuously by the ship's underway acquisition system from R/V Knorr cruise KN207-01 in the southern tip of Nova Scotia to Bermuda in 2012 (SargassoSeaLipids project)2012-07-17Final no updates expected
Scientific sampling event log from R/V Knorr cruise KN207-01 in the southern tip of Nova Scotia to Bermuda in 2012 (SargassoSeaLipids project)2012-07-17Final no updates expected
CTD profiles from R/V Knorr cruise KN207-01 in the southern tip of Nova Scotia to Bermuda in 2012 (SargassoSeaLipids project)2012-07-17Final no updates expected
Niskin bottle basic hydrography from CTD from R/V Atlantic Explorer cruise AE1104 in the Sargasso Sea from 2011-2011 (SargassoSeaLipids project)2012-01-12Final no updates expected
One decibar-averaged CTD profiles from R/V Atlantic Explorer cruise AE-X1103/AE1104 from the Sargasso Sea in 2011 (SargassoSeaLipids project)2011-12-13Final no updates expected

People

Principal Investigator: Benjamin A.S. Van Mooy
Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution (WHOI)

BCO-DMO Data Manager: Shannon Rauch
Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution (WHOI BCO-DMO)


Programs

Ocean Carbon and Biogeochemistry [OCB]