Large deep-sea zooplankton biomass mirrors primary productivity in the global ocean.
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URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10508/15379Visitar enlace: https://www.nature.com/article ...
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Hernández-León, S. (Santiago); Koppelmann, R. (Rolf); Fraile-Nuez, E. (Eugenio); Bode, A. (Antonio); Mompeán-de-la-Rosa, M.C. (María del Carmen); Irigoien, X. (Xabier); Olivar, M.P. (María Pilar); Echevarría, F. (Fidel); Fernández-de-Puelles, M.L. (María Luz); González-Gordillo, J.A.; Cózar, A. (Andrés); Acuña, J.L. (José Luis); Agustí, S.; Duarte, C.M.Fecha de publicación
2020Tipo
articleResumen
The biological pump transports organic carbon produced by photosynthesis to the meso- and
bathypelagic zones, the latter removing carbon from exchanging with the atmosphere over
centennial time scales. Organisms living in both zones are supported by a passive flux of
particles, and carbon transported to the deep-sea through vertical zooplankton migrations.
Here we report globally-coherent positive relationships between zooplankton biomass in the
epi-, meso-, and bathypelagic layers and average net primary production (NPP). We do so
based on a global assessment of available deep-sea zooplankton biomass data and largescale estimates of average NPP. The relationships obtained imply that increased NPP leads to
enhanced transference of organic carbon to the deep ocean. Estimated remineralization from
respiration rates by deep-sea zooplankton requires a minimum supply of 0.44 Pg C y−1
transported into the bathypelagic ocean, comparable to the passive carbon sequestration. We
suggest that the ...