Enhanced subarctic Pacific stratification and nutrient utilization during glacials over the last 1.2 Myr

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Abstract

The relationship between climate, biological productivity, and nutrient flux is of considerable interest in the subarctic Pacific, which represents an important high-nitrate, low-chlorophyll region. While previous studies suggest that changes in iron supply and/or physical ocean stratification could hypothetically explain orbital-scale fluctuations in subarctic Pacific nutrient utilization and productivity, previous records of nutrient utilization are too short to evaluate these relationships over many glacial-interglacial cycles. We present new, high-resolution records of sedimentary δ15N, which offer the first opportunity to evaluate systematic, orbital-scale variations in subarctic Pacific nitrate utilization from 1.2 Ma. Nitrate utilization was enhanced during all glacials, varied with orbital-scale periodicity since the mid-Pleistocene transition, was strongly correlated with enhanced aeolian dust and low atmospheric CO2, but was not correlated with productivity. These results suggest that glacial stratification, rather than iron fertilization, systematically exerted an important regional control on nutrient utilization and air-sea carbon flux. Key Points Subarctic Pacific nitrate utilization was enhanced during every previous glacial since 1.2 Ma Stratification controlled orbital-scale nitrate utilization and air-sea carbon flux Biological productivity in today's HNLC regions can switch from being iron to nitrate limited.

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Knudson, K. P., & Ravelo, A. C. (2015). Enhanced subarctic Pacific stratification and nutrient utilization during glacials over the last 1.2 Myr. Geophysical Research Letters, 42(22), 9870–9879. https://doi.org/10.1002/2015GL066317

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