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Oligotrophy and Nitrogen Fixation During Eastern Mediterranean Sapropel Events
282
Citations
53
References
1999
Year
EutrophicationEngineeringMarine ChemistryOceanographySocial SciencesOrganic GeochemistryBiogeographyBiological OceanographyNitrogen FixationSapropel FormationNitrogen Isotopic MeasurementsAnnual Mass SinkingBiogeochemistryBiogeochemical CyclePhytoplankton EcologySedimentologyNutrient CycleMarine BiologyPaleoecology
Nitrogen isotopic measurements in fossil chlorophyll from late Pleistocene organic-rich sediments (sapropels) in the eastern Mediterranean Sea provide geochemical evidence for stratified, nutrient-depleted surface water and extensive nitrogen fixation. This evidence is reconciled with previous indications of high productivity by invoking a model of sapropel formation in which increased river discharge facilitates development of a specialized phytoplankton population whose annual mass sinking provides the organic flux to generate sapropels. This interpretation is consistent with the widespread occurrence of mat-forming diatoms that thrive in stratified water and can harbor diazotrophic bacterial symbionts, but does not support eutrophication of surface waters by enhanced river runoff or a circulation reversal.
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