AI Article Synopsis

  • Salp blooms significantly enhance the ocean's biological carbon pump (BCP) by facilitating the export of organic matter, even though their sporadic nature often leads to underrepresentation in models.
  • During a 2018 study in the northeast subarctic Pacific, it was found that salps produced fecal pellets that accounted for up to 82% of the particulate organic carbon (POC) from the entire epipelagic zooplankton community.
  • The rapid sinking and low degradation rates of salp fecal pellets contribute to a substantial increase in carbon export efficiency, elevating the BCP's functionality and enhancing carbon sequestration, especially in low flux ocean environments.

Article Abstract

Periodic blooms of salps (pelagic tunicates) can result in high export of organic matter, leading to an "outsized" role in the ocean's biological carbon pump (BCP). However, due to their episodic and patchy nature, salp blooms often go undetected and are rarely included in measurements or models of the BCP. We quantified salp-mediated export processes in the northeast subarctic Pacific Ocean in summer of 2018 during a bloom of . Salps migrated from 300 to 750 m during the day into the upper 100 m at night. Salp fecal pellet production comprised up to 82% of the particulate organic carbon (POC) produced as fecal pellets by the entire epipelagic zooplankton community. Rapid sinking velocities of salp pellets (400-1,200 m d) and low microbial respiration rates on pellets (<1% of pellet C respired day) led to high salp pellet POC export from the euphotic zone-up to 48% of total sinking POC across the 100 m depth horizon. Salp active transport of carbon by diel vertical migration and carbon export from sinking salp carcasses was usually <10% of the total sinking POC flux. Salp-mediated export markedly increased BCP efficiency, increasing by 1.5-fold the proportion of net primary production exported as POC across the base of the euphotic zone and by 2.6-fold the proportion of this POC flux persisting 100 m below the euphotic zone. Salps have unique and important effects on ocean biogeochemistry and, especially in low flux settings, can dramatically increase BCP efficiency and thus carbon sequestration.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10078299PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1029/2022GB007523DOI Listing

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