Past and current climate change has affected the food sources in the surface waters in the North Pacific Ocean.
The North Pacific Subtropical Gyre, the largest continuous ecosystem on Earth, has undergone major shifts in phytoplankton community composition associated with large-scale regional climate change. These findings have major implications for understanding past and future changes in open ocean productivity and food web dynamics, the efficacy of the biological pump and ocean biogeochemical cycling. A major finding is that the current North Pacific Subtropical Gyre plankton regime, characterized by enhanced nitrogen-fixing cyanobacterial production (a process in which algae and diatoms turn gaseous nitrogen into a food source), appears to have started around the end of the Little Ice Age and the beginning of the Industrial Era, and is likely unprecedented in the past 1,000 years.
By using samples of Hawaiian gold corals (Kulamanamana haumeaae), which are extraordinarily long-lived, and useful paleo-environmental archives, the team used a new technique to analyze compound-specific individual amino acids found in the coral's organic skeleton. "To reconstruct past plankton community composition dynamics, we applied a cutting-edge compound-specific stable isotope fingerprinting approach to deep-sea corals," said lead author Kelton McMahon.
Climate change is predicted to alter marine phytoplankton (algae and diatoms) communities and affect productivity, biogeochemistry and the efficacy of the biological pump.
"We reconstructed high-resolution records of changing plankton community composition in the North Pacific Ocean over the past millennium," said LLNL geochemist Tom Guilderson, one of the authors.
A key observation from this study is that the most recent approximate 150 years has seen an increase in nitrogen fixing cyanobacteria resulting in food production.
"It's sort of a carbon credit because the phytoplankton are making their own nitrogen-based fertilizer out of dissolved nitrogen," Guilderson said. "This is a big deal because as the oceans have warmed over the last 150 years, the surface water of the subtropical gyre has become more stable. allowing less nutrients (like nitrogen and phosphorous) from below to be entrained into the surface layer where the phytoplankton need this 'fertilizer' to grow and take up carbon from the atmosphere.
"This picoplankton community shift may have provided a negative feedback to rising atmospheric carbon dioxide, during the last 100 years. However, we cannot expect this to be the case in the future," Guilderson said.
The research has been published in the journal Science Express.
Author: Anne M Stark | Source: Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory [December 02, 2015]
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