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Microbial iron limitation in the ocean's twilight zone. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • Primary production in the sunlit ocean relies on nutrients like nitrate, phosphate, and iron, which are essential for phytoplankton to convert CO2 into biomass.
  • Microbial metabolism in the upper mesopelagic 'twilight zone' (200-500 m) is believed to be constrained by the availability of organic carbon.
  • The study reveals high concentrations of siderophores, indicating iron deficiency in both the surface and twilight zone of the eastern Pacific Ocean, suggesting that low iron availability may limit microbial metabolism across larger areas of the ocean, impacting carbon storage.

Article Abstract

Primary production in the sunlit surface ocean is regulated by the supply of key nutrients, primarily nitrate, phosphate and iron (Fe), required by phytoplankton to fix carbon dioxide into biomass. Below the surface ocean, remineralization of sinking organic matter rapidly regenerates nutrients, and microbial metabolism in the upper mesopelagic 'twilight zone' (200-500 m) is thought to be limited by the delivery of labile organic carbon. However, few studies have examined the role of nutrients in shaping microbial production in the mesopelagic. Here we report the distribution and uptake of siderophores, biomarkers for microbial Fe deficiency across a meridional section of the eastern Pacific Ocean. Siderophore concentrations are high not only in chronically Fe-limited surface waters but also in the twilight zone underlying the North and South Pacific subtropical gyres, two key ecosystems for the marine carbon cycle. Our findings suggest that bacterial Fe deficiency owing to low Fe availability is probably characteristic of the twilight zone in several large ocean basins, greatly expanding the region of the marine water column in which nutrients limit microbial metabolism, with potential implications for ocean carbon storage.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41586-024-07905-zDOI Listing

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