Langone1, L., M. Ravaioli1,
A. Malaguti 2, F. Giglio1, P. Giordani1
and M. Frignani1
1ISMAR-CNR, Sezione Geologia Marina, Bologna, Italy and 2ENEA,
AMB. CAT. FRAL., Bologna, Italy, Tel: +39 051 6398870, Fax: +39 051 6398940, E-mail: langone@igm.bo.cnr.it
Vertical budgets of organic carbon and biogenic silica in the western Ross Sea, Antarctica
The assessment of vertical budgets provides very useful quantitative information
on the basic steps of biogeochemical cycling, from production in the surface
waters to burial into the sediments. The Southern Ocean in general, and the
Ross Sea in particular, are well suited areas for these studies because their
high, silica-based primary productivity may play a major role in the global
CO2 balance. In this contribution we discuss the data sets obtained
from two working stations located in the Ross Sea Polynya and Joides Basin.
Moored instruments were maintained over the period 1995-2000 as a part of
the Project BIOSESO of the Italian National Research Program for Antarctica
(PNRA). The two stations had been originally chosen as representative of areas
characterized by different sea-ice conditions and presumably different levels
of primary production. The data sets include new production by 15NO3-
uptake, downward fluxes measured by sediment traps, benthic and burial fluxes
of particulate organic carbon and biogenic silica, pore water contents of
dissolved nutrients and carbon. Processes such as nutrient regeneration, lateral
transport, sediment accumulation and early diagenesis of biogenic elements
will be addressed as a function of oceanographic conditions and seasonal forcing.