Litcius/Paper detail

Modeling Photosynthesis and Exudation in Subtropical Oceans

Zhen Wu, Stephanie Dutkiewicz, Oliver Jahn, Daniel Sher, Angelicque White, Michael J. Follows

2021Global Biogeochemical Cycles19 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract Marine phytoplankton contributes nearly half of the total primary production on Earth through photosynthesis. Parameterizations of algal photosynthesis commonly employed in global biogeochemical simulations generally fail to capture the observed vertical structure of primary production. Here we examined the consequences of decoupling photosynthesis (carbon fixation) and biosynthesis (biomass building) with accumulation or exudation of excess photosynthate under energy rich conditions in both regional and global models. The results show that the decoupling of these two processes improved the simulated vertical profile of primary production, increased modeled primary production over 30% globally and over 40% in subtropical oceans, improved simulated meridional patterns of particulate C:N:P and increased modeled surface pool of labile/semi‐labile dissolved organic carbon. More generally, these results highlight the importance of exudation, which results from the decoupling of photosynthesis and biosynthesis, as a major physiological process affecting ocean biogeochemistry.

Topics & Concepts

PhotosynthesisBiogeochemical cycleBiogeochemistryPhytoplanktonEnvironmental scienceDecoupling (probability)SubtropicsPrimary producersCarbon cyclePrimary productionCarbon fixationBiomass (ecology)Microbial loopEnvironmental chemistryOceanographyAtmospheric sciencesEcosystemChemistryBotanyEcologyBiologyNutrientGeologyEngineeringControl engineeringMarine and coastal ecosystemsMarine Biology and Ecology ResearchMicrobial Community Ecology and Physiology