RESPIRATION RATES IN SUBSURFACE WATERS OF THE NORTHERN INDIAN-OCEAN -EVIDENCE FOR LOW DECOMPOSITION RATES OF ORGANIC-MATTER WITHIN THE WATER COLUMN IN THE BAY-OF-BENGAL
Swa. Naqvi et al., RESPIRATION RATES IN SUBSURFACE WATERS OF THE NORTHERN INDIAN-OCEAN -EVIDENCE FOR LOW DECOMPOSITION RATES OF ORGANIC-MATTER WITHIN THE WATER COLUMN IN THE BAY-OF-BENGAL, Deep-sea research. Part 2. Topical studies in oceanography, 43(1), 1996, pp. 73-81
Depth profiles of activity of the respiratory electron transport syste
m (ETS) have been generated at several locations in the northern India
n Ocean. The results reveal much lower ETS activities in subsurface wa
ters of the Bay of Bengal than those measured in the Arabian Sea. Lowe
r respiration rates in the Bay of Bengal are corroborated by the much
weaker north-south gradients in oxygen and total carbon dioxide. These
are, however, in conflict; with the higher sinking fluxes of organic
carbon measured with sediment traps. The observations support the view
that particulate organic matter may undergo a lesser degree of oxidat
ion in the water column through its incorporation into rapidly sinking
matter, perhaps as a result of the massive inputs of terrigenous matt
er in the Bay of Bengal. The differential respiration rates may cause
changes in the distribution of suspended particulate matter and may al
so explain why the Bay of Bengal is not a site of water-column denitri
fication in spite of an apparently slower renewal of the intermediate
waters as compared to the Arabian Sea.