Project: Collaborative Research: Diatoms, Food Webs and Carbon Export - Leveraging NASA EXPORTS to Test the Role of Diatom Physiology in the Biological Carbon Pump

Acronym/Short Name:Diatoms and carbon export
Project Duration:2018-03 -2024-09
Geolocation:Sub-Arctic Pacific, Ocean Station Papa

Description

NSF Award Abstract:
This project focuses on a group of microscopic single-celled photosynthetic organisms in the ocean called diatoms. Diatoms float in the surface ocean as part of a group of organisms collectively called phytoplankton. There are thousands of different species of diatoms distributed across the global ocean. A famous oceanographer Henry Bigelow once said "All fish is diatoms" reflecting the importance of diatoms as the base of the food chain that supports the world's largest fisheries. Despite their small size, diatom photosynthesis produces 20% of the oxygen on earth each year. That's more than all of the tropical rain forests on land. The major objective of the research is to understand how the metabolic differences among diatom species affects the amount of diatom organic carbon that is carried, or exported, from the surface ocean to the deep ocean. As diatoms are photo-synthesizers like green plants, their biological carbon comes from converting carbon dioxide dissolved in seawater from the atmosphere into organic forms. Diatoms also require a series of other nurtrients supplied by the ocean such as nitrogen and phosphorous and, uniquely for diatoms, the silicon used to construct their glass shells. This research will investigate how genetic and physiological differences among diatoms influence how each species react to changes in nutrient levels in the ocean and how those shifts affect the export of diatom carbon to the deep sea. The link between diatoms' physiological response and their carbon export comes about because shifts in physiology affect diatom attributes like how fast they sink and how tasty they are to predators. So if we can relate the physiological condition of different diatoms to the food-web pathways followed by different species, we can ultimately use knowledge of diatom physiological status and food web structure to predict how much diatom carbon gets to the deep sea. The research involves investigators with expertise in the physiology and genomics of diatoms and in the ocean's chemistry. The work will initially take place in the subarctic North Pacific in conjunction with the NASA Export Processes in the Ocean from RemoTe Sensing (EXPORTS) field program. The EXPORTS program is using a wide variety of methods to quantify the export and fate of photo-synthetically fixed carbon in the upper ocean. The research supports the training of undergraduate students, graduate students and a postdoctoral scholar. The research will also serve as the basis for activities aimed at K-12 and junior high school students.

The research will broadly impact our understanding of the biology of the biological pump (the transport of photo-synthetically fixed organic carbon to the deep sea) by forming a mechanistic basis for predicting the export of diatom carbon. It is hypothesized that the type and degree of diatom physiological stress are vital aspects of ecosystem state that drive export. To test this hypothesis, the genetic composition, rates of nutrient use and growth response of diatom communities will be evaluated and supported with measurements of silicon and iron stress to evaluate stress as a predictor of the path of diatom carbon export. The subarctic N. Pacific ecosystem is characterized as high nutrient low chlorophyll (HNLC) due to low iron (Fe) levels that are primary controllers constraining phytoplankton utilization of other nutrients. It has been a paradigm in low Fe, HNLC systems that diatoms grow at elevated Si:C and Si:N ratios and should be efficiently exported as particles significantly enriched in Si relative to C. However, Fe limitation also alters diatoms species composition and the high Si demand imposed by low Fe can drive HNLC regions to Si limitation or Si/Fe co-limitation. Thus, the degree of Si and/or Fe stress in HNLC waters can all alter diatom taxonomic composition, the elemental composition of diatom cells, and the path cells follow through the food web ultimately altering diatom carbon export.

This award reflects NSF's statutory mission and has been deemed worthy of support through evaluation using the Foundation's intellectual merit and broader impacts review criteria.


DatasetLatest Version DateCurrent State
Dissolved trace metal and macronutrient concentrations from field samples collected during the EXPORTS North Atlantic campaign at the Porcupine Abyssal Plain-Sustained Observatory (PAP-SO) site on board the RRS Discovery (DY131) in May 20212025-02-28Final no updates expected
Data from nutrient manipulation experiments (conducted on EXPORTS cruise DY131) aimed at relieving or inducing nutrient stress in phytoplankton and quantifying these responses using metatranscriptomic sequencing2025-01-21Final no updates expected
Dissolved trace metal and macronutrient concentration data from incubation experiments conducted during the May 2021 EXPORTS North Atlantic cruise (DY131)2024-12-30Final no updates expected
Dissolved trace metal (Mn, Fe, Co, Ni, Cu, Zn, Cd, Pb) concentrations from depth profile samples collected on the 2018 EXPORTS cruise (RR1813) to the subarctic North Pacific near Ocean Station PAPA (Station P) on R/V Roger Revelle2023-07-06Final no updates expected
Dissolved trace metal (Mn, Fe, Co, Ni, Cu, Zn, Cd, Pb) and labile particulate elemental (P, V, Mn, Fe, Co, Ni, Cu, Zn, Cd, Pb) concentrations from shipboard incubation experiments conducted on the 2018 EXPORTS cruise (RR1813) near Ocean Station PAPA2023-06-06Final no updates expected
Dissolved trace metal (Mn, Fe, Co, Ni, Cu, Zn, Cd, Pb) concentrations from surface (towfish) samples collected during the 2018 EXPORTS cruise (RR1813) to the subarctic North Pacific near Ocean Station PAPA (Station P) on R/V Roger Revelle 2023-06-02Final no updates expected
Depth profiles in the euphotic zone of nitrate, silicate, and phosphate concentrations and profiles of silicic acid uptake rates from EXPORTS cruise DY131 in the North Atlantic during May 20212023-04-12Final no updates expected
Results from nutrient limitation assessments quantifying the level of Si, N, and Fe stress being experienced by phytoplankton in samples collected on EXPORTS cruise DY131 in the North Atlantic during May 20212023-04-06Final no updates expected
32Si and 14C production data (experimental) from EXPORTS cruise RR1813 on R/V Roger Revelle in the Subarctic North Pacific near Station PAPA from August to September 20182020-01-06Final no updates expected
32Si data from EXPORTS cruise RR1813 on R/V Roger Revelle in the Subarctic North Pacific near Station PAPA from August to September 20182020-01-03Final no updates expected

People

Principal Investigator: Mark A. Brzezinski
University of California-Santa Barbara (UCSB-MSI)

Principal Investigator: Kristen Nicolle Buck
University of South Florida (USF)

Principal Investigator: Bethany D. Jenkins
University of Rhode Island (URI)

Contact: Bethany D. Jenkins
University of Rhode Island (URI)


Programs

EXport Processes in the Ocean from Remote Sensing [EXPORTS]


Data Management Plan

DMP_Jenkins_Buck_Brzezinski_OCE-1756442_1756442_1756442.pdf (98.27 KB)
02/09/2025