Zinc stimulation of phytoplankton in a low carbon dioxide, coastal Antarctic environment: evidence for the Zn hypothesis.

Riss M Kell, Adam V Subhas, Nicole L Schanke, Lauren E Lees, Rebecca J Chmiel, Deepa Rao, Margaret M Brisbin, Dawn M Moran, Matthew R McIlvin, Francesco Bolinesi, Olga Mangoni, Raffaella Casotti, Cecilia Balestra, Tristan J Horner, Robert B Dunbar, Andrew E Allen, Giacomo R DiTullio, Mak A Saito
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Abstract

The ocean acts as a carbon sink, absorbing carbon from the atmosphere and resulting in substantial uptake of anthropogenic CO 2 emissions. As biological processes in the oceans such as net primary production (NPP) contribute significantly to this sink, understanding how they will shift in response to increasing atmospheric CO 2 is necessary to project future ocean carbon storage capacity. Macronutrient and micronutrient resource limitation within the oceans regulates NPP, and while some micronutrients such as zinc (Zn) are present at very low concentrations, their ability to limit NPP has remained unclear. Zn is a key micronutrient used by phytoplankton for a multitude of metabolic functions, yet there have been few observations of its influence on natural oceanic phytoplankton populations. In this study, we observed Zn limitation of growth in the natural phytoplankton community of Terra Nova Bay, Antarctica, in addition to primary iron (Fe) limitation. Shipboard incubation experiments amended with Zn and Fe resulted in significantly higher chlorophyll a content and dissolved inorganic carbon drawdown compared to Fe addition alone. Zn and Fe stress response proteins detected in incubation and environmental biomass provided independent verification of algal co-stress for these micronutrients. We consider total biomass and low surface ocean pCO 2 as potential drivers of environmental Zn stress. This study definitively establishes that Zn limitation can occur in the modern oceans, opening up new possibility space in our understanding of nutrient regulation of NPP through geologic time, and we consider the future of oceanic Zn limitation in the face of climate change.

低二氧化碳环境下锌对沿海生产力的促进作用。
锌(Zn)是浮游植物获取碳(C)的关键微量营养素,但对其对天然海洋浮游植物种群影响的观察很少。在本研究中,除了原生铁(Fe)限制外,我们还观察到南极洲Terra Nova Bay天然浮游植物群落由于低(~220 μatm) pCO2条件而受到Zn限制。与单独添加铁相比,添加锌和铁的船载培养实验显著提高了叶绿素a含量和溶解无机碳的减少。在孵育和环境生物量中检测到的Zn和Fe响应蛋白为这些微量营养素的藻类共胁迫提供了独立的验证。这些低二氧化碳分压条件下的锌限制观测表明,锌可以影响沿海初级生产力。然而,随着海洋表层二氧化碳浓度随着人类排放的持续上升,Zn/C共同限制的发生将变得越来越少,从而影响Zn和其他微量金属元素的生物地球化学循环。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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