Authors
Ken O Buesseler, Carl H Lamborg, Philip W Boyd, Phoebe J Lam, Thomas W Trull, Robert R Bidigare, James KB Bishop, Karen L Casciotti, Frank Dehairs, Marc Elskens, Makio Honda, David M Karl, David A Siegel, Mary W Silver, Deborah K Steinberg, Jim Valdes, Benjamin Van Mooy, Stephanie Wilson
Publication date
2007/4/27
Journal
science
Volume
316
Issue
5824
Pages
567-570
Publisher
American Association for the Advancement of Science
Description
The oceanic biological pump drives sequestration of carbon dioxide in the deep sea via sinking particles. Rapid biological consumption and remineralization of carbon in the “twilight zone” (depths between the euphotic zone and 1000 meters) reduce the efficiency of sequestration. By using neutrally buoyant sediment traps to sample this chronically understudied realm, we measured a transfer efficiency of sinking particulate organic carbon between 150 and 500 meters of 20 and 50% at two contrasting sites. This large variability in transfer efficiency is poorly represented in biogeochemical models. If applied globally, this is equivalent to a difference in carbon sequestration of more than 3 petagrams of carbon per year.
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