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Dissolved Oxygen and Nutrient Cycling

The interplay of photosynthesis at the surface and respiration at depth carves the ocean's vertical patterns of oxygen and nutrients, controlling where life thrives and where oxygen-starved zones expand.

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Definition

Nutrient cycling is the movement of biologically essential elements between dissolved, particulate, and living pools in the ocean, coupled to the production and consumption of dissolved oxygen during photosynthesis and respiration.

Scope

This topic covers the solubility and distribution of dissolved oxygen, the formation and dynamics of oxygen minimum zones, the major limiting nutrients (nitrate, phosphate, silicate) and micronutrients such as iron, the biological pump that exports organic matter, and the regeneration of nutrients and consumption of oxygen during decomposition.

Core questions

  • What controls the solubility and vertical distribution of dissolved oxygen in the ocean?
  • How do oxygen minimum zones form, and why are they expanding?
  • Which nutrients limit primary production in different ocean regions?
  • How does the biological pump redistribute carbon and nutrients between surface and deep waters?

Key theories

Redfield ratio and remineralization
Marine organic matter forms and decays with a characteristic carbon to nitrogen to phosphorus ratio, so respiration at depth consumes oxygen and regenerates nutrients in predictable proportions.
The biological pump
Sinking organic particles transport carbon and nutrients from the sunlit surface to the deep ocean, where their decomposition draws down oxygen and stores carbon away from the atmosphere.

Mechanisms

Phytoplankton in the sunlit surface take up nutrients and release oxygen during photosynthesis; the organic matter they produce sinks and is respired at depth, consuming oxygen and releasing nutrients back into solution. Where circulation supplies little oxygen and respiration is high, oxygen minimum zones develop, and upwelling returns regenerated nutrients to fuel further production.

Clinical relevance

Nutrient supply governs ocean productivity and fisheries, while declining oxygen and expanding dead zones threaten marine ecosystems; both are sensitive to warming and circulation change, making them key indicators of ocean health under climate change.

History

Redfield established the proportional link between marine nutrients and biology in the 1930s-1950s; later work, including Martin's iron hypothesis of the late 1980s, revealed that scarce micronutrients can limit productivity over vast ocean regions, reshaping understanding of nutrient control.

Key figures

  • Alfred Redfield
  • John Martin

Related topics

Seminal works

  • sarmientoGruber2006
  • redfield1958

Frequently asked questions

What is an oxygen minimum zone?
It is a depth layer, typically in the upper few hundred to thousand metres, where dissolved oxygen falls to very low levels because respiration consumes oxygen faster than sluggish circulation can resupply it.
Why is iron an important nutrient in the ocean?
Iron is required for photosynthesis but is extremely scarce in much of the open ocean, so in regions rich in other nutrients it can be the factor that limits how much phytoplankton can grow.

Methods for this concept

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