Sarmiento, J. L., R. D. Slater, M. J. R. Fasham, H. W. Ducklow, J. R.
Toggweiler, and G. T. Evans, 1993: A seasonal three-dimensional ecosystem
model of nitrogen cycling in the North Atlantic euphotic zone. Global
Biogeochemical Cycles, 7(2), 417-450.
Abstract: A seven-component upper ocean ecosystem model of nitrogen
cycling calibrated with observations at Bermuda Station "S" has
been coupled to a three-dimensional seasonal general circulation model
(GCM) of the North Atlantic Ocean. The aim of this project is to improve
our understanding of the role of upper ocean biological processes in controlling
surface chemical distributions, and to develop approaches for assimilating
large data sets relevant to this problem. A comparison of model predicted
chlorophyll with satellite coastal zone color scanner observations shows
that the ecosystem model is capable of responding realistically to a variety
of physical forcing environments. Most of the discrepancies identified
are due to problems with the GCM model. The new production predicted by
the model is equivalent to 2 to 2.8 mol m-2
yr-1 of carbon uptake, or 8 to 12 GtC/yr
on a global scale. The southern half of the subtropical gyre is the only
major region of the model with almost complete surface nitrate removal
(nitrate<0.1 mmol m-3).
Despite this, almost the entire model is nitrate limited in the sense that
any addition of nitrate supply would go predominately into photosynthesis.
The only exceptions are some coastal upwelling regions and the high latitudes
during winter, where nitrate goes as high as ~10 mmol m-3