Al. Alldredge, Interstitial dissolved organic carbon (DOC) concentrations within sinking marine aggregates and their potential contribution to carbon flux, LIMN OCEAN, 45(6), 2000, pp. 1245-1253
Accurate estimates of the quantity of organic carbon sedimenting to the sea
door are important in evaluating the rate at which carbon is sequestered i
n the deep sea and the impact of the ocean on the global carbon cycle. Howe
ver, extensive studies quantifying marine sedimentation over the past decad
es have considered only the particulate fraction of sinking material. Disso
lved organic carbon (DOC) carried along in the interstices of sinking marin
e snow, the particles that comprise the bulk of particle flux throughout mo
st of the ocean, has not been included previously. Empirical measurements o
f the interstitial DOC concentrations of individual aggregates of marine sn
ow from coastal California and Washington revealed high values ranging from
8.9 to 140 mg L-1 that were significantly correlated with aggregate size,
decreasing as aggregate size increased. Solubilization of particulate matte
r within aggregates by associated bacteria and reduced diffusion rates due
to the fractal geometry of aggregates help maintain these high interstitial
concentrations against diffusive processes. Although interstitial DOC conc
entrations were one to two orders of magnitude higher than ambient DOC conc
entrations in the surrounding seawater, the cumulative interstitial DOC in
aggregates contributed <2.5% to total DOC in the water column. However, DOC
comprised up to 31% of the total organic carbon in aggregates, averaging a
bout 20%, indicating that previous measurements of sedimenting carbon in th
e ocean that have included only the particulate fraction have significantly
and systematically underestimated the vertical flux of organic carbon.