NSF LogoNSF Award Abstract - #0196427 AWSFL008-DS3

BIOCOMPLEXITY: Collaborative Research: Factors Affecting, and Impact of,
Diazotrophic Microorganisms in the Western Equatorial Atlantic Ocean

NSF Org OCE
Latest Amendment Date June 12, 2003
Award Number 0196427
Award Instrument Continuing grant
Program Manager Phillip R. Taylor
OCE DIVISION OF OCEAN SCIENCES
GEO DIRECTORATE FOR GEOSCIENCES
Start Date April 1, 2001
Expires December 31, 2004 (Estimated)
Expected Total Amount $794857 (Estimated)
Investigator Edward J. Carpenter ecarpent@sfsu.edu (Principal Investigator current)
Sponsor San Francisco State Univ
1600 Holloway Ave
San Francisco, CA 941321722 415/338-7091
NSF Program 1650 BIOLOGICAL OCEANOGRAPHY
Field Application
Program Reference Code 1366,1389,4444,EGCH,

Abstract

9981618 Carpenter et al.

BIOCOMPLEXITY: Collaborative Research: Factors affecting, and impact of, diazotrophic microorganisms in the western Equatorial Atlantic Ocean

This biocomplexity research focuses on plankton dynamics in the western Equatorial Atlantic Ocean (WEQAT). This is a complex and understudied ecosystem that has significant impacts on marine resources in the region as well as in downstream areas such as the Caribbean Sea. The study centers on diazotrophic (nitrogen fixing) microorganisms as keystone species. Geological, physical, biological, chemical and even social factors all have a major influence on population biology and activity of diazotrophs in the WEQAT. Diazotrophs in turn have a major impact on other phytoplankton and trophic levels through input of fixed nitrogen (N). The Amazon River affects the region physically by changing salinity and thereby water column stratification, and geochemically by introducing iron and silicate which can then biologically stimulate the growth of diatoms that contain the N2 fixing endosymbiont Richelia intracellularis. Furthermore, the area receives significant seasonal atmospheric inputs of iron in dust from the Sahel region of Africa, which can promote the growth of the important N2 fixing cyanobacterium Trichodesmium. This atmospheric iron source is directly deposited on the surface waters where biological activity is greatest. For Trichodesmium, the physical environment (e.g. high wind speed) can also inhibit activity and the formation of blooms. Diazotrophs may be affected by land use practices in the Amazon Basin and the African Sahel, and N2 fixed by marine plankton can affect humans by stimulating primary productivity and fishery yields. Using both remote sensing and shipboard measurements, scientists will examine the complex processes which structure these planktonic diazotroph populations, influence their importance in CO2 and N2 fixation, which, in turn, affect other planktonic processes. The seasonal and spatial relationships of Trichodesmium and Hemiaulus / Richelia associations will be examined with direct reference to the major routes of inputs of Fe and Si, and with regard to the physical environment. The group of collaborating scientists will examine the trophic structures associated with each diazotrophic community, including the vertical distribution of processes and associated autotrophic and heterotrophic plankton populations. These data will be used to develop and verify biogeochemical and trophodynamic models that incorporate the complex physical, chemical and biological interactions that characterize the WEQAT region. The models will, in turn, be used to examine the hypothesis that physical forcing, through its effect on the diazotrophic populations and the structure of the food web, influences N2 fixation and, in part, determines the high productivity of the WEQAT. The work uses a combination of both observations and models to address three fundamental issues in biocomplexity: 1) the relationship between ecosystem structure and function in a system that is both nonlinear and high-dimensional; 2) the response of a nonlinear ecosystem to environmental forcing; and 3) the relevant level of detail, including the resolution of physical space, that must be incorporated in nonlinear systems to capture the dynamics of a global ecosystem property (here, high productivity). The research will significantly advance our understanding of the interaction between physical and biogeochemical processes in an important area the world's oceans, and identify how these interactions regulate variability in marine ecosystem productivity.


You may also retrieve a text version of this abstract.
Please report errors in award information by writing to: award-abstracts-info@nsf.gov.

Please use the browser back button to return to the previous screen.

If you have trouble accessing any FastLane page, please contact the FastLane Help Desk at 1-800-673-6188