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Brzezinski, Mark A (2001): (Table 2) Integrated concentration, production and dissolution of silica in the water column of the southern Pacific [dataset]. PANGAEA, https://doi.org/10.1594/PANGAEA.441703, Supplement to: Brzezinski, Mark A; Nelson, David M; Franck, Valerie M; Sigmon, Daniel E (2001): Silicon dynamics within an intense open-ocean diatom bloom in the Pacific sector of the Southern Ocean. Deep Sea Research Part II: Topical Studies in Oceanography, 48(19-20), 3997-4018, https://doi.org/10.1016/S0967-0645(01)00078-9

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Abstract:
An intense diatom bloom developed within a strong meridional silicic acid gradient across the Antarctic Polar Front at 61°S, 170°W following stratification of the water column in late October/early November 1997. The region of high diatom biomass and the silicic acid gradient propogated southward across the Seasonal Ice Zone through time, with the maximum diatom biomass tracking the center of the silicic acid gradient. High diatom biomass and high rates of silica production persisted within the silicic acid gradient until the end of January 1998 (ca. 70 d) driving the gradient over 500 km to the south of its original position at the Polar Front. The bloom consumed 30 to >40 µM Si(OH)4 in the euphotic zone between about 60 and 66°S leaving near surface concentrations <2.5 µM and occasionally <1.0 µM in its wake. Integrated biogenic silica concentrations within the bloom averaged 410 mmol Si/m**2 (range 162-793 mmol Si/m**2). Average integrated silica production on two consecutive cruises in December 1997 and January 1998 that sampled the bloom while it was well developed were 27.5±6.9 and 22.6±20 mmol Si/m**2/d, respectively. Those levels of siliceous biomass and silica production are similar in magnitude to those reported for ice-edge diatom blooms in the Ross Sea, Antarctica, which is considered to be among the most productive regions in the Southern Ocean. Net silica production (production minus dissolution) in surface waters during the bloom was 16-21 mmol Si/m**2/d, which is sufficient for diatom growth to be the cause of the southward displacement of the silicic acid gradient. A strong seasonal change in silica dissolution : silica production rate ratios was observed. Integrated silica dissolution rates in the upper 100-150 m during the low biomass period before stratification averaged 64% of integrated production. During the bloom integrated dissolution rates averaged only 23% of integrated silica production, making 77% of the opal produced available for export to depth. The bloom ended in late January apparently due to a mixing event. Dissolution : production rate ratios increased to an average of 0.67 during that period indicating a return to a predominantly regenerative system.
Our observations indicate that high diatom biomass and high silica production rates previously observed in the marginal seas around Antarctica also occur in the deep ocean near the Polar Front. The bloom we observed propagated across the latitudinal band overlying the sedimentary opal belt which encircles most of Antarctica implying a role for such blooms in the formation of those sediments. Comparison of our surface silica production rates with new estimates of opal accumulation rates in the abyssal sediments of the Southern Ocean, which have been corrected for sediment focusing, indicate a burial efficiency of <=4.6% for biogenic silica. That efficiency is considerably lower than previous estimates for the Southern Ocean.
Coverage:
Median Latitude: -59.920513 * Median Longitude: -170.356154 * South-bound Latitude: -67.780000 * West-bound Longitude: -174.730000 * North-bound Latitude: -52.970000 * East-bound Longitude: -168.290000
Date/Time Start: 1997-10-26T00:00:00 * Date/Time End: 1998-03-19T00:00:00
Parameter(s):
#NameShort NameUnitPrincipal InvestigatorMethod/DeviceComment
DATE/TIMEDate/TimeGeocode
LATITUDELatitudeGeocode
LONGITUDELongitudeGeocode
Sample code/labelSample labelBrzezinski, Mark A
Biogenic silica, fluxbSiO2 fluxmmol/m2/dayBrzezinski, Mark Aintegratedbiogenic silica concentration
Biogenic silica productionbSiO2 prodmmol/m2/dayBrzezinski, Mark Aintegratedbiogenic silica production
Biogenic silica dissolutionbSiO2 dissmmol/m2/dayBrzezinski, Mark Aintegratedbiogenic silica dissolution
RatioRatioBrzezinski, Mark ACalculateddissolution/production
ProductionP1/dayBrzezinski, Mark Aspecific rate of silica production
10 DissolutionDiss1/dayBrzezinski, Mark Aspecific rate of silica dissolution
Size:
172 data points

Data

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Date/Time

Latitude

Longitude

Sample label

bSiO2 flux [mmol/m2/day]

bSiO2 prod [mmol/m2/day]

bSiO2 diss [mmol/m2/day]

Ratio

P [1/day]
10 
Diss [1/day]
1997-10-26-58.00-170.00Survey I_243.80.13
1997-11-05-59.33-170.00Survey I_1254.46.8
1997-11-08-59.96-171.90Survey I_1665.4
1997-11-14-60.24-170.69Survey I_1854.49.55.80.610.200.090
1997-11-02-60.50-169.00Survey I_8109.010.46.40.610.100.110
1997-11-19-60.83-168.29Survey I_23112.00.170.100
1997-10-29-62.37-170.08Survey I_3131.011.47.90.690.070.050
1997-12-30-52.99-174.59Process I_1982.83.10.04
1997-12-06-53.03-174.68Process I_1171.024.80.40.010.150.003
1997-12-29-54.33-173.33Process I_18231.010.40.05
1997-12-27-55.66-171.74Process I_17158.012.70.09
1997-12-08-56.84-170.16Process I_231.12.82.00.720.080.090
1997-12-09-58.50-170.00Process I_3208.0
1997-12-12-60.23-170.07Process I_4213.020.04.40.220.100.020
1997-12-24-60.67-168.83Process I_13366.0
1997-12-24-60.79-168.83Process I_14344.0
1997-12-13-60.92-169.25Process I_5422.030.64.70.150.080.010
1997-12-24-60.92-169.83Process I_15429.0
1997-12-25-61.04-168.83Process I_16538.0
1997-12-24-61.17-168.83Process I_12521.0
1997-12-24-61.67-168.83Process I_11793.0
1997-12-15-61.67-168.83Process I_6392.035.310.90.310.100.030
1997-12-23-62.40-169.83Process I_10603.036.66.60.180.070.004
1997-12-20-63.08-169.85Process I_9311.021.06.30.300.070.050
1997-12-18-64.15-169.19Process I_7246.021.90.10
1997-12-19-64.70-169.28Process I_8255.026.90.11
1998-01-12-57.02-170.14Survey II_288.0
1998-01-26-60.00-170.10Survey II_682.85.00.07
1998-01-27-61.00-170.10Survey II_7162.04.30.02
1998-01-20-62.00-170.10Survey II_5317.07.00.03
1998-01-19-64.83-170.10Survey II_4647.033.40.06
1998-01-28-65.17-170.10Survey II_8417.045.50.12
1998-01-16-67.78-170.11Survey II_3164.028.20.22
1998-02-17-52.97-174.73Process II_124.94.30.20.040.190.010
1998-03-15-54.33-173.33Process II_2912.00.20.03
1998-03-19-56.85-170.17Process II_2147.06.60.06
1998-03-13-58.50-170.00Process II_2731.71.50.07
1998-03-13-60.23-170.10Process II_2634.99.10.32
1998-02-22-60.23-170.07Process II_461.63.02.20.750.060.070