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Comparison between chemical and isotopic measurements of biological nitrate utilization: further evidence of low new-production levels in the equatorial Pacific

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New-production (nitrate uptake) rates in the equatorial Pacific were estimated by parallel measurements of nitrate disappearance from sea water using a colorimetric method and of 15N-labelled nitrate (15NO3 ) incorporation into particulate organic nitrogen (PON) collected on GF/F filters (net nitrate uptake, conventional 15N-tracer method) and Anopore (0.2 μm) membranes. Regression analyses of 74 sample pairs gathered during 12 and 24 h productivity experiments revealed a significant positive relationship between decreasing nitrate level and 15NO3 accumulation into PON retained on GF/F filters, but the slopes of Model I and Model II regression lines were 1.18 and 1.29, respectively, suggesting that 15 to 22% of 15NO3 removed from the dissolved fraction were lost to another N-pool. Two possible avenues for the missing 15NO3 have been examined: uptake by submicron particles passed through the GF/F filters, and loss as dissolved organic nitrogen (DON). Nitrate uptake by small cells not recovered on GF/F filters, could be safely eliminated as a cause of loss, since 15NO3 uptake rates obtained from 15N entering PON collected on GF/F filters agreed well with those obtained from 15N entering PON collected on Anopore membranes (32 sample pairs). Inspection of the DON pool of 0.2 μm filtrates for excess-15N enrichment (20 samples) revealed that in nitrate-rich waters (equatorial upwelling between 1°N and 10°S), loss of 15NO3 as DO15N accounted for <5% of net nitrate uptake. In samples from subtropical oligotrophic waters (from 11°S southward), however, 15NO3 loss as DO15N represented up to 20% of net NO3 uptake. These results, as well as experimental considerations concerning the use of colorimetric and isotopic methods to measure new production show that: (1) earlier reported high discrepancies between nitrate decreases (ΔNO3 ) and 15NO3 incorporation into filterable particles (ΔNO3 /15NO3 incorporation >2) were probably erroneous; (2) the use of GF/F filters does not result in an underestimation of new production, although it was found to underestimate PON concentrations by up to 60%; (3) in the equatorial upwelling area (1°N to 10°S), which has high ambient nitrate levels (>2000 nmol l−1) but only slight changes in concentration (0 to 80 nmol l−1 d−1), new production is more accurately estimated by the isotopic method than by the chemical method; (4) in subtropical oligotrophic waters (from 11°S southward) with low ambient nitrate levels (0 to 100 nmol l−1), both procedures are appropriate as long as nitrate removal per incubation period is >3 nmol l−1 (lower rates are only detectable with the isotopic method); (5) the traditional 15N-tracer technique does not substantially underestimate net new-production in the equatorial Pacific, and failure to account for the loss of 15NO3 as DON, i.e. to estimate gross nitrate uptake (gross uptake = net uptake + 15N loss) tends to underestimate new production on an average by only 10%. Overall, the apparent low level of new production in the nitrate-rich area of the central equatorial Pacific seems to be a fact, and may be ascribable to other nutrient (macro and micro) deficiencies and/or to intense in situ recycling of ammonium and nitrate (regenerated production) rather than to inaccurate nitrate uptake rates measured with the classical 15N-tracer technique.

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Received: 24 November 1998 / Accepted 10 March 2000

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Raimbault, P., Slawyk, G. & Garcia, N. Comparison between chemical and isotopic measurements of biological nitrate utilization: further evidence of low new-production levels in the equatorial Pacific. Marine Biology 136, 1147–1155 (2000). https://doi.org/10.1007/s002270000312

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  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s002270000312

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