Project: Collaborative Research: Impact of the Amazon River Plume on Nitrogen Availability and Planktonic Food Web Dynamics in the Western Tropical North Atlantic

Acronym/Short Name:Amazon River Plume Nitrogen
Project Duration:2018-01 -2021-12
Geolocation:Amazon River plume

Description

NSF Award Abstract:
This is a focused program of field research in waters of the Western Tropical North Atlantic influenced by the Amazon River Plume during the high river flow season. The Amazon Plume region supports diverse plankton communities in a dynamic system driven by nutrients supplied by transport from the river proper as well as nutrients entrained from offshore waters by physical mixing and upwelling. This creates strong interactions among physical, chemical, and biological processes across a range of spatial and temporal scales. The field program will link direct measurements of environmental properties with focused experimental studies of nutrient supply and nutrient limitation of phytoplankton, as well as the transfer of phytoplankton nitrogen to the zooplankton food web. The Amazon Plume exhibits a close juxtaposition of distinct communities during the high-flow season, making it an ideal site for evaluating how nutrient availability, nutrient supply, and habitat longevity interact to drive offshore ecosystem dynamics and function. This project will include German collaborators and will seamlessly integrate education and research efforts. The investigators and their institutions have a strong commitment to undergraduate and graduate education and to increasing the diversity of the ocean science community through active recruiting and training efforts. The team has a strong track record of involving both undergraduate and graduate students in their field and lab research. The two research cruises planned will provide opportunities for students and technicians to interact with an interdisciplinary and international research team.

The ultimate objectives of this project are to understand the processes and interactions that promote distinct communities of nitrogen-fixing organisms (diazotrophs) and other phytoplankton around the Amazon Plume and to explore the impacts of these diazotroph-rich communities on zooplankton biomass and production. The research team includes scientists with expertise in nutrient and stable isotope biogeochemistry, remote sensing as well as specialists in characterizing water mass origin and history using naturally occurring radium isotopes. This combination of approaches will provide a unique opportunity to address fundamental questions related to plankton community structure, primary production, and links to secondary production in pelagic ecosystems. The project will address the following key questions focused on fundamental issues in plankton ecology resulting from previous research in this region:

A. What mechanisms promote the preferential delivery of bioavailable phosphorus and the resulting strong nitrogen limitation associated with the northern reaches of the Amazon Plume during the high flow season?

B. What factors lead to the clear niche separation between diazotrophs within and around the Amazon Plume and how are the distinct diazotroph communities influenced by hydrographic and biogeochemical controls associated with the Amazon River Plume and offshore upwelling processes?

C. How does the nitrogen fixed by the different types of diazotrophs contribute to secondary production, and how efficiently does diazotroph nitrogen move through the food web?


DatasetLatest Version DateCurrent State
Data from custom instrument (CLASS) measured on R/V Endeavor cruise (EN614) in May 20182022-06-23Preliminary and in progress
Phytoplankton diagnostic pigments from HPLC from samples collected on R/V Endeavor cruise EN640 in the tropical North Atlantic during June-July 20192021-12-08Final no updates expected
Dissolved, inorganic nutrient data integrated with bottle data from R/V Endeavor cruise EN614 in May 20182021-10-26Final no updates expected
Dissolved, inorganic nutrient data integrated with bottle data from R/V Endeavor cruise EN640 in June-July 20192021-09-24Final no updates expected
Bottle data from CTD casts conducted on R/V Endeavor cruise EN640 from June-July 20192021-04-23Final no updates expected
Radium isotope (223Ra, 224Ra, and 226Ra) measurements from CTD and underway water samples collected on R/V Endeavor cruise EN640 from June-July 20192021-03-24Final no updates expected
Binned profiles of CTD measurements from R/V Endeavor cruise EN640 from June-July 20192021-03-19Final no updates expected
Phytoplankton diagnostic pigments from HPLC from samples collected on R/V Endeavor cruise EN614 in the tropical North Atlantic during May 20182019-06-05Final no updates expected
Hydrographic data collected during casts with a CTD-rosette system on R/V Endeavor cruise EN614 from May to June 20182019-03-06Final no updates expected
Radium isotope measurements from CTD and underway water samples from the R/V Endeavor cruise EN614 from 2018-05-06 to 2018-05-292019-02-11Final no updates expected

People

Principal Investigator: Joseph Montoya
Georgia Institute of Technology (GA Tech)

Principal Investigator: Richard N. Peterson
Coastal Carolina University

Principal Investigator: Ajit Subramaniam
Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory (LDEO)

Contact: Joseph Montoya
Georgia Institute of Technology (GA Tech)


Data Management Plan

DMP_Peterson_Montoya_Subramaniam_OCE-1736947_1737078_1737128.pdf (142.67 KB)
02/09/2025