Award Abstract # 1735664
Collaborative Research: Biogeochemical and Physical Conditioning of Sub-Antarctic Mode Water in the Southern Ocean

NSF Org: OCE
Division Of Ocean Sciences
Recipient: BIGELOW LABORATORY FOR OCEAN SCIENCES
Initial Amendment Date: July 26, 2017
Latest Amendment Date: July 13, 2020
Award Number: 1735664
Award Instrument: Standard Grant
Program Manager: Henrietta Edmonds
hedmonds@nsf.gov
 (703)292-7427
OCE
 Division Of Ocean Sciences
GEO
 Directorate for Geosciences
Start Date: August 1, 2017
End Date: July 31, 2023 (Estimated)
Total Intended Award Amount: $1,198,953.00
Total Awarded Amount to Date: $1,434,692.00
Funds Obligated to Date: FY 2017 = $1,198,953.00
FY 2020 = $235,739.00
History of Investigator:
  • William Balch (Principal Investigator)
    bbalch@bigelow.org
Recipient Sponsored Research Office: Bigelow Laboratory for Ocean Sciences
60 BIGELOW DR
EAST BOOTHBAY
ME  US  04544-5700
(207)315-2567
Sponsor Congressional District: 01
Primary Place of Performance: Bigelow Laboratory for Ocean Sciences
60 Bigelow Drive
East Boothbay
ME  US  04544-0380
Primary Place of Performance
Congressional District:
01
Unique Entity Identifier (UEI): DRTAEZWWJHM8
Parent UEI:
NSF Program(s): BIOLOGICAL OCEANOGRAPHY,
Chemical Oceanography
Primary Program Source: 01001718DB NSF RESEARCH & RELATED ACTIVIT
01002021DB NSF RESEARCH & RELATED ACTIVIT
Program Reference Code(s): 1389, 4444, 9117, 9150
Program Element Code(s): 165000, 167000
Award Agency Code: 4900
Fund Agency Code: 4900
Assistance Listing Number(s): 47.050

ABSTRACT

Cold surface water in the southern Indian Ocean sinks to about 500 meters and travels in the dark for thousands of miles before it resurfaces some 40 years later near the equator in the other ocean basins. This major water mass is named the Sub-Antarctic Mode Water (SAMW). Nutrients it contains when it warms and rises into the sunlit subtropical and tropical waters are estimated to fuel up to 75% of the microscopic plant growth there. Before it sinks, the chemical properties of the SAMW are modified by the growth and distinct physiology of two common phytoplankton; diatoms with shells made of silica, and coccolithophores with carbonate shells. Local physical dynamics influence where and how fast these two phytoplankton classes grow. Consequently, differing nutrient and trace chemical fingerprints are established at the point of SAMW formation. This project is an exceptionally detailed field and modeling effort that will document and quantify the remarkable, interconnected processes that chemically connect two important oceanic ecosystems half a world apart. The scientists leading the project will study the complexity of the biological and chemical conditioning of the SAMW and thus provide critical data about the large-scale oceanic controls of the biological carbon pump that removes atmospheric carbon dioxide to the deep ocean over millennial timescales. Scientific impact from this project will stem from significant peer-reviewed publications and improved predictive models. Societal benefits will develop from training of a range of scholars, including high school, undergraduate, and graduate students, as well as technical and post-doctoral participants. A high school teacher and science communication specialist will go to sea with the project and share experiences from the ship with students on shore via social media and scheduled web interactions.

To examine how SAMW formation and subduction controls the productivity of global waters well to the north, two January expeditions to the SE Indian Ocean will identify, track, and study the unique mesoscale eddies that serve as discrete water parcels supporting rich populations of either coccolithophores or diatoms plus their associated microbial communities. The eddies will be tracked with Lagrangian Argo drifters and observations will be made of exactly how SAMW is chemically conditioned (i.e. Si, N, P, Fe, and carbonate chemistry) over time scales of months. Using data obtained on the feedback between ecological processes and nutrient, trace metal, and carbonate chemistry in these eddies and on related transect cruises, the project will have three main goals: (1) determine the rates at which SAMW coccolithophores and diatoms condition the carbonate chemistry plus nutrient and trace metal concentrations, as well as assess taxonomic and physiological diversity in the study area with traditional methods plus next-generation sequence DNA/RNA profiling, (2) explore growth limitations by iron, silicate and/or nitrate in controlling algal assemblages and genetic diversity, and (3) combine these findings with the Ekman- and eddy-driven subduction of SAMW to examine biogeochemical impact on a basin scale, using both observations and global numerical models. A meridional survey from 30 to 60 degrees south latitude will be used to characterize the larger-scale variability of carbonate chemistry, nutrient distributions, productivity, genetics and biomass of various plankton groups as SAMW is subducted and proceeds northward.

PUBLICATIONS PRODUCED AS A RESULT OF THIS RESEARCH

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Balch, William M. and Bowler, Bruce C. and Drapeau, David T. and Lubelczyk, Laura C. and Lyczkowski, Emily and Mitchell, Catherine and Wyeth, Amy "Coccolithophore distributions of the North and South Atlantic Ocean" Deep Sea Research Part I: Oceanographic Research Papers , v.151 , 2019 10.1016/j.dsr.2019.06.012 Citation Details

PROJECT OUTCOMES REPORT

Disclaimer

This Project Outcomes Report for the General Public is displayed verbatim as submitted by the Principal Investigator (PI) for this award. Any opinions, findings, and conclusions or recommendations expressed in this Report are those of the PI and do not necessarily reflect the views of the National Science Foundation; NSF has not approved or endorsed its content.

Three-quarters of the primary productivity of the  northern hemisphere oceans is supported by SubAntarctic Mode Water (SAMW), which is formed in the Southern Ocean, around 50oS latitude and supplies nutrients to the north.  We surveyed the Indian Ocean basin and the SW Pacific basin where SAMW is formed,  with the goal to understand factors controlling the algal distributions in the formation region, to perform experiments on the limiting factors that affect the biogeochemistry of these waters and to better model the role of coccolithophores and other phytoplankton groups  (diatoms, dinoflagellates nanoplankton and picoplankton) which condition SAMW before it is subducted northwards into the northern hemisphere.

Intelectual merit- We confirmed the importance of the calcifying algae, coccolithophores (which produce vast quantities of calcium carbonate, aka particulate inorganic carbon, PIC, or  limestone) in the Great Calcite Belt, the largest such high-reflectance coccolithophore feature in the world ocean, found in the SubAntarctic Waters around the globe.  Moreover, we demonstrated the relative importance of another mineralizing algal class, diatoms with such high concentrations of biogenic silica, which produce high reflectance waters closer to Antarctica.  These have confounded previous attempts to measure PIC in these polar waters.  We documented the rate of conditioning of SAMW by microbial communities using CFC tracers.  We mapped-out the distributions of the phytoplankton around these important frontal features using a video plankton recorder (VPR).  This allowed us to better document the communities of phytoplankton and larger zooplankton that make up the Southern Ocean ecosystem.  We also performed experiments on the ship that eludicate the factors affecting the fundamental biogeochemistry  of the SAMW.

Broader Impacts-  Twelve students (undergraduates, graduate students, post-docs) were trained aboard ship on these cruises.  The graduate students gained valuable research experience towards their doctoral dissertations.  Moreover, we brought two educators on the cruises who translated the science to students ashore through regular blogs, social media and remote interactions.  This work with students ashore interactively reached >100 students, pre-, during-, and post-cruise.  The results of this work have eludicated the factors that limit productivity of a significant fraction of the world ocean.


Last Modified: 08/30/2023
Modified by: William M Balch

Addendum # 1

  • Award Title: Collaborative Research: Biogeochemical and Physical Conditioning of Sub-Antarctic Mode Water in the Southern Ocean
  • Federal Award ID: 1735664
  • Report Submission Period: 08/01/2022 to 07/31/2023

Three-quarters of the primary productivity of the northern hemisphere oceans is supported by Subantarctic Mode Water (SAMW), which is formed in the Southern Ocean, around 50oS latitude and supplies nutrients to the north.  We surveyed the Indian Ocean basin and the SW Pacific basin where SAMW is formed, with the goal to understand factors controlling the algal distributions in the formation region, to perform experiments on the limiting factors that affect the biogeochemistry of these waters and to better model the role of coccolithophores and other phytoplankton groups (diatoms, dinoflagellates nanoplankton and picoplankton) which condition SAMW before it is subducted northwards into the northern hemisphere.

Intellectual merit- We confirmed the importance of the calcifying algae, coccolithophores (which produce vast quantities of calcium carbonate, aka particulate inorganic carbon, PIC, or limestone) in the Great Calcite Belt, the largest such high-reflectance coccolithophore feature in the world ocean, found in the Subantarctic Waters around the globe.  Moreover, we demonstrated the relative importance of another mineralizing algal class, diatoms with such high concentrations of biogenic silica, which produce high reflectance waters closer to Antarctica.  These have confounded previous attempts to measure PIC in these polar waters.  We documented the rate of conditioning of SAMW by microbial communities using chlorofluorocarbon tracers.  We mapped-out the distributions of the phytoplankton around these important frontal features using a video plankton recorder (VPR).  This allowed us to better document the communities of phytoplankton and larger zooplankton that make up the Southern Ocean ecosystem, communities that are responsible for the preconditioning of SAMW prior to its subduction.  We also performed experiments on the ship that elucidate the factors affecting the fundamental biogeochemistry of the SAMW.

Broader Impacts- Twelve students (undergraduates, graduate students, post-docs) were trained aboard ship on these cruises.  The graduate students gained valuable research experience towards their doctoral dissertations.  Moreover, we brought two educators on the cruises who translated the science to students ashore through regular blogs, social media and remote interactions.  This work with students ashore interactively reached >100 students, pre-, during-, and post-cruise.  The results of this work have elucidated the factors that limit productivity of a significant fraction of the world ocean.

 


Added: 11/29/2023
Submitted by: William M Balch

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