Author/Authors :
Babu، نويسنده , , C. Prakash and Nath، نويسنده , , B. Nagender، نويسنده ,
Abstract :
The surficial sediments from the upper continental slope of the eastern Arabian Sea, impinged by the oxygen minimum zone (OMZ, 150–1200 m water depth), show varying concentrations of the biogenic element phosphorus (P, 0.1–0.2%) in the northern and southern areas even though total organic carbon concentrations are relatively constant (TOC, 2–5%; Prakash Babu et al., 1999). To understand this discordance, 17 surface sediment samples from shelf, slope and deep sea of the eastern Arabian Sea were investigated using a five-step sequential extraction scheme to delineate the process responsible for P enrichment in OMZ. High fractions of organic phosphorus (Porg 10–26%), biogenic phosphorus (Pbio 36–48%), relatively low molar Corg/Porg ratios (322–447), and Corg/Preactive ratios close to Redfield Ratio in OMZ sediments of the SE Arabian Sea suggest accumulation under high surface production and low residence time of labile forms of P due to high sedimentation rates. Despite higher productivity in surface waters, low fractions of Porg (8–13%; less than deep-sea sediments of the study area 12–13%), Pbio (25–33%), relatively high molar Corg/Porg ratios (341–508), and Corg/Preactive ratios less than Redfield Ratio in OMZ sediments from the NE Arabian Sea may indicate a higher degree of regeneration and diagenetic transformation of labile forms of P to other phases. Authigenic phosphorus (Paut) fraction varies by a factor of 2–8 in sediments from the OMZ when compared to well-oxygenated deep-sea sediments of the study area. While the Ptotal remains constant, significant P transformation seems to occur in NE Arabian Sea, which is suggested by high Paut fraction (∼50%) compared to low Paut fraction (10–39%) in the SE Arabian Sea sediments. Supply rates of phosphorus, variable rates of P dissolution under varying dissolved oxygen contents in the bottom waters, and early diagenetic transformation of P within the sediments seem to influence P geochemistry in sediments overlain by the OMZ in the eastern Arabian Sea.