Gruber, N., and J. L. Sarmiento,
1997: Global patterns of marine nitrogen fixation and denitrification.
Global Biogeochemical Cycles, 11(2), 235-266.
Abstract: A new quasi-conservative tracer N*, defined as
a linear combination of nitrate and phosphate, is proposed to investigate
the distribution of nitrogen fixation and denitrification in the world
oceans. Spatial patterns of N* are determined in the difference
ocean basins using data from the Geochemical Ocean Sections Study (GEOSECS)
cruises (1972-1978) and from eight additional cruises in the Atlantic Ocean.
N* is low (< -3 µmol kg-1)
in the Arabian Sea and in the eastern tropical North and South Pacific.
This distribution is consistent with direct observations of water column
denitrification in these oxygen minimum zones. Low N*concentrations
in the Bering Sea and near the continental shelves of the east and west
coasts of North America also indicate a sink of N* due to benthic
denitrification. High concentrations of N* (>2.0
µmol kg-1) indicative of prevailing
nitrogen fixation are found in the thermocline of the tropical and subtropical
North Atlantic and in the Mediterranean. This suggests that on a global
scale these basins are acting as sources of fixed nitrogen, while the Indian
Ocean and parts of the Pacific Ocean are acting as sinks. Nitrogen fixation
is estimated in the North Atlantic Ocean (10° N - 50° N) using
the N* distribution along isopycnal surfaces and information about
the water age. We calculate a fixation rate of 28 Tg N yr-1
which is about 3 times larger than the most recent global estimate. Our
result is in line, however, with some recent suggestions that pelagic nitrogen
fixation may be seriously underestimated. The implied flux of 0.072 mol
N m-2 yr-1 is
sufficient to meet all the nitrogen requirement of the estimated net community
production in the mixed layer during summer at the Bermuda Atlantic Time-series
Study (BATS) site in the northwestern Sargasso Sea. Extrapolation of our
North Atlantic estimate to the global ocean suggests that the present-day
budget of nitrogen in the ocean may be in approximate balance.