Abstract
This study provides extensive data on planktonic N2 fixation rates across the whole Mediterranean Sea. They show that N2 fixation occurs in Mediterranean waters during the stratification period, with a clear decreasing trend from the oligotrophic western basin (10-76 -2 d -1) to the ultra oligotrophic eastern basin (0-0.4 mol mg -2 d -1). Highest rates are measured in the less oligotrophic western basin, between the surface and 75 m-depth, where 45 to 75 % of N2 fixation are found within the picoplanktonic fraction (<3 m). While the biogeochemical impact of N 2 fixation in the eastern basin seems negligible, N 2 fixation is able to sustain up to 35 % of new primary production during the stratified period in the western basin. These data disagree with indirect estimates of N 2 fixation based on geochemical tracers and nutrient budgets, which indicates that N 2 fixation increases with increasing N:P ratios and decreasing stable N isotopic signature of particulate organic nitrogen and NO 3 from west to east. These results finally point out the need to assess N 2 fixation at a higher temporal resolution in order to better understand the diazotrophs' dynamic under contrasted biogeochemical conditions. © 2011 Author(s).
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CITATION STYLE
Bonnet, S., Grosso, O., & Moutin, T. (2011). Planktonic dinitrogen fixation along a longitudinal gradient across the Mediterranean Sea during the stratified period (BOUM cruise). Biogeosciences, 8(8), 2257–2267. https://doi.org/10.5194/bg-8-2257-2011
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