JpGU-AGU Joint Meeting 2017

講演情報

[EE] 口頭発表

セッション記号 B (地球生命科学) » B-CG 地球生命科学複合領域・一般

[B-CG07] [EE] 地球惑星科学 生命圏フロンティアセッション

2017年5月22日(月) 10:45 〜 12:15 201B (国際会議場 2F)

コンビーナ:高野 淑識(海洋研究開発機構)、鈴木 庸平(東京大学大学院理学系研究科)、福士 圭介(金沢大学環日本海域環境研究センター)、柳川 勝紀(九州大学大学院比較社会文化研究院)、座長:福士 圭介(金沢大学環日本海域環境研究センター)、座長:柳川 勝紀(九州大学大学院比較社会文化研究院)、座長:高野 淑識(JAMSTEC)

11:15 〜 11:30

[BCG07-09] The microbial nitrogen pump in the ocean: Role of heterotrophic bacteria in the ocean DON pool indicated by compound-specific δ15N analysis of amino acids

*山口 保彦1,2McCarthy Matthew D.2 (1.東京大学 大気海洋研究所、2.カリフォルニア大学サンタクルーズ校)

キーワード:Dissolved Organic Matter, Marine Nitrogen Cycle, Amino Acids, Heterotrophic Bacteria, Compound-Specific Isotope Analysis, Deep Ocean

Dissolved organic nitrogen (DON) is one of the most important - but perhaps least understood - components of the modern ocean nitrogen cycle. We explored the use of compound-specific nitrogen isotope analysis of amino acids (δ15NAA) of DON as a new approach to examine relative sources and transformation processes of the main detrital organic nitrogen form in the ocean water column. We measured δ15NAA distributions in high-molecular-weight DON (HMW DON) and suspended particulate organic nitrogen (PON) samples from various oceanic regions including the oligotrophic open ocean (the North Pacific Subtropical Gyre) and a coastal upwelling system (the California Current System). A new analytical approach using HPLC purification of amino acids achieved far greater δ15NAA measurement precision for DON than earlier work, allowing us to resolve previously obscured differences in δ15NAA signatures, both with depth and between ON pools. The δ15NAA values of DON in the various oceanic regions and depths (surface to mesopelagic) suggest mainly heterotrophic sources, with the mesopelagic and upwelled DON bearing signatures of far more degraded material. These results contrast with a previous proposal that DON are essentially "pre-formed" in the surface ocean, undergoing little further change with depth. Together with the results of amino acid enantiomers (D/L), these results suggest that transformation by heterotrophic bacteria is the main source for DON in the ocean.