Title of article :
Nitrogen cycling in the southern North Sea: consequences for total nitrogen transport
Author/Authors :
K. Weston، نويسنده , , T. D. Jickells، نويسنده , , L. Fernand، نويسنده , , E. R. Parker، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2004
Abstract :
Nitrate and ammonium uptake rates were measured during a series of cruises in the well-mixed region of the southern North Sea
from February to September. Water column-integrated uptake rates ranged between 0.01 and 8.7 mmolNm 2 d 1 and 0.01 and
12.2 mmolNm 2 d 1 for nitrate and ammonium, respectively, with ammonium uptake dominating after the phytoplankton spring
bloom in May. A moored buoy continuously measuring nitrate and chlorophyll a and seabed current meters were also deployed in
the central southern North Sea in the region of the East Anglian plumeda permanent physical feature which transports nutrients
towards continental Europe. This enabled the flux of water and hence of nutrients across the southern North Sea to be determined
and an assessment of the contribution of freshwater nutrients to the flux to be made. A simple box model is developed to relate the
phytoplankton uptake of nitrate and ammonium to the transport of nitrate, ammonium and particulate organic matter (POM)
across the southern North Sea. This showed the importance of the plume region of the North Sea in the processing of nitrogen, with
nitrate dominating total nitrogen transport prior to the spring bloom (10 340!103 kgN inflow to the plume in March) and transport
of nitrogen as ammonium, nitrate and POM in approximately equivalent amounts during summer (2560, 2960 and 2151!103 kgN
inflow to the plume, respectively, in July). The box model also demonstrates more generally the need to assess nitrogen transport as
nitrate, ammonium and POM if an improved understanding of the impact of nutrient input in shelf seas is to be achieved.
Keywords :
North Sea , transport , Nitrogen , plankton production
Journal title :
Estuarine, Coastal and Shelf Science
Journal title :
Estuarine, Coastal and Shelf Science