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Roles of food web and heterotrophic microbial processes in upper ocean biogeochemistry: Global patterns and processes
Richard B. Rivkin 1 * and Louis Legendre 2
  1 Ocean Sciences Center, Memorial University of Newfoundland, St John's, Newfoundland A1C 3T3, Canada and
  2 Laboratoire d'Océanographie de Villefranche, BP 28, 06234 Villefranche-sur-Mer Cedex, France
*Author to whom correspondence should be addressed. Email: rrivkin@mun.ca
Copyright 2002 Ecological Society of Japan
KEYWORDS
bacteria • biogeochemical cycles • biogeography • carbon cycling • climate change • microbial food web • global ocean • phytoplankton • zooplankton

ABSTRACT

The growth and dynamics of plankton in the ocean vary with natural cycles, global climate change and the long-term evolution of ecosystems. The ocean is a large reservoir for CO2 and the food webs in the upper ocean play critical roles in regulating the global carbon cycle, changes in atmospheric CO2 and associated global warming. Microheterotrophs are a key component of the upper ocean food webs. Here, we report on the results of an analysis of the distribution of bacteria and related properties in the World Ocean. We found that, for the data set as a whole, there is a significant latitudinal gradient in all field-measured and computed bacterial properties, except growth rate. Gradients were, for the most part, driven by an equator-ward increase in the Southern Hemisphere. The biomass, rates of production and respiration and dissolved organic carbon concentrations were significantly higher in the Northern than the Southern hemispheres. In contrast, growth rates were the same in the two hemispheres. We conclude that the lower biomass and production in the Southern Hemisphere reflects greater top-down control by microbial grazers, which would be due to a lower abundance or activity of omnivorous zooplankton in the Southern than Northern Hemispheres. These large spatial differences in dynamics, structure and activity of the bacterial community and the microbial food web will be reflected in different patterns of carbon cycling, export and air–sea exchange of CO2 and the potential ability of the ocean to sequester carbon.


DIGITAL OBJECT IDENTIFIER (DOI)
10.1046/j.1440-1703.2002.00475.x About DOI

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