2015
DOI: 10.1002/2014gb005013
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Isotopic evidence for nitrification in the Antarctic winter mixed layer

Abstract: We report wintertime nitrogen and oxygen isotope ratios (δ 15 N and δ 18 O) of seawater nitrate in the Southern Ocean south of Africa. Depth profile and underway surface samples collected in July 2012 extend from the subtropics to just beyond the Antarctic winter sea ice edge. We focus here on the Antarctic region (south of 50.3°S), where application of the Rayleigh model to depth profile δ 15 N data yields estimates for the isotope effect (the degree of isotope discrimination) of nitrate assimilation (1.6-3.3… Show more

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Cited by 50 publications
(97 citation statements)
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“…In the T min , NO 3 À + NO 2 À samples fall slightly above the 1:1 line in δ 18 O versus δ 15 N space, reflecting the decrease in NO 3 À δ 15 N relative to ln(NO 3 À ) within the T min layer (i.e., the kink). This feature has been observed previously in winter data from the Atlantic sector of the AZ and is hypothesized to result from the remineralization of low-δ 15 N N remaining in the mixed layer at the end of the summer [Smart et al, 2015]. ranges from À91 ± 18‰ to À6 ± 22‰, with an average value of À58 ± 52‰ (2σ, n = 55; Figure 5).…”
Section: Non-rayleigh Dynamics and Estimation Of Isotope Effectssupporting
confidence: 77%
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“…In the T min , NO 3 À + NO 2 À samples fall slightly above the 1:1 line in δ 18 O versus δ 15 N space, reflecting the decrease in NO 3 À δ 15 N relative to ln(NO 3 À ) within the T min layer (i.e., the kink). This feature has been observed previously in winter data from the Atlantic sector of the AZ and is hypothesized to result from the remineralization of low-δ 15 N N remaining in the mixed layer at the end of the summer [Smart et al, 2015]. ranges from À91 ± 18‰ to À6 ± 22‰, with an average value of À58 ± 52‰ (2σ, n = 55; Figure 5).…”
Section: Non-rayleigh Dynamics and Estimation Of Isotope Effectssupporting
confidence: 77%
“…NO 2 À δ 15 N is depth dependent, with an average value above 90 m of À69 ± 33‰ (2σ, n = 41) that is lower than the value below 90 m of À24 ± 38‰ (2σ, n = 14; Figure 5, grey bar). In addition, the surface NO 2 À δ 15 N is significantly lower than that calculated by Smart et al [2015] for the Atlantic sector of the Antarctic Zone; using a similar approach, they estimated NO 2 À δ 15 N to range from À40‰ to À20‰ in the winter mixed layer. We first consider a mechanism suggested previously to explain observations of low-δ 15 N NO 2 À in samples from the wintertime Atlantic AZ.…”
Section: Non-rayleigh Dynamics and Estimation Of Isotope Effectsmentioning
confidence: 86%
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