Around one third of current Arctic Ocean primary production sustained by rivers and coastal erosion

Open access
Date
2021-01-08Type
- Journal Article
Abstract
Net primary production (NPP) is the foundation of the oceans’ ecosystems and the fisheries they support. In the Arctic Ocean, NPP is controlled by a complex interplay of light and nutrients supplied by upwelling as well as lateral inflows from adjacent oceans and land. But so far, the role of the input from land by rivers and coastal erosion has not been given much attention. Here, by upscaling observations from the six largest rivers and using measured coastal erosion rates, we construct a pan-Arctic, spatio-temporally resolved estimate of the land input of carbon and nutrients to the Arctic Ocean. Using an ocean-biogeochemical model, we estimate that this input fuels 28–51% of the current annual Arctic Ocean NPP. This strong enhancement of NPP is a consequence of efficient recycling of the land-derived nutrients on the vast Arctic shelves. Our results thus suggest that nutrient input from the land is a key process that will affect the future evolution of Arctic Ocean NPP. Show more
Permanent link
https://doi.org/10.3929/ethz-b-000462352Publication status
publishedExternal links
Journal / series
Nature CommunicationsVolume
Pages / Article No.
Publisher
NatureSubject
Element cycles; Marine biology; Marine chemistryOrganisational unit
03731 - Gruber, Nicolas / Gruber, Nicolas
Funding
641816 - Coordinated Research in Earth Systems and Climate: Experiments, kNowledge, Dissemination and Outreach (SBFI)
821003 - Climate-Carbon Interactions in the Coming Century (EC)
More
Show all metadata