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  • 2015-2019  (5)
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  • 1
    Call number: ZSP 166-310
    Type of Medium: Series available for loan
    Pages: ii, 29 Blätter , Illustrationen
    Series Statement: Berichte aus dem MARUM und dem Fachbereich Geowissenschaften der Universität Bremen No. 310
    Classification:
    Oceanology
    Language: English
    Location: Lower compact magazine
    Branch Library: GFZ Library
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  • 2
    Publication Date: 2019
    Description: Long‐term data characterizing the oceans’ biological carbon pump are essential for understanding impacts of climate variability on marine ecosystems. The ‘Bakun upwelling intensification hypothesis’ suggests intensified coastal upwelling due to a greater land‐sea temperature gradient influenced by global warming. We present long time‐series of bathypelagic (ca. 1200‐3600m) particle fluxes from a coastal (CBeu: 2003‐2016] and an offshore (CBmeso: 1988‐2016) sediment trap setting located in the Canary Current upwelling. Organic carbon (Corg) and biogenic opal (BSi, diatoms) fluxes were two‐ to three‐fold higher at the coastal upwelling site compared to the offshore site, respectively, and showed higher seasonality with flux maxima in spring. A relationship between winter and spring BSi fluxes to the North Atlantic Oscillation (NAO) index was best expressed at the offshore site CBmeso. Lithogenic (dust) fluxes regularly peaked in winter when frequent low‐altitude dust storms and deposition occurred, decreasing offshore by about three‐fold. We obtained a high temporal match of short‐term peaks of BSi and dust fluxes in winter‐spring at the inner site CBeu. We found synchronous flux variations at both sites and an anomalous year 2005, characterized by high BSi and Corg fluxes under a low NAO. Corg and BSi fluxes revealed a decreasing trend from 2006 to 2016 at the coastal site CBeu, pointing to coastal upwelling relaxation during the last two decades. The permanent offshore upwelling zone of the deflected Canary Current represented by the flux record of CBmeso showed no signs of increasing upwelling as well which contradicts the Bakun hypothesis.
    Print ISSN: 0886-6236
    Electronic ISSN: 1944-9224
    Topics: Biology , Chemistry and Pharmacology , Geography , Geosciences , Physics
    Published by Wiley on behalf of American Geophysical Union (AGU).
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  • 3
    Publication Date: 2016-05-27
    Description: A more than two-decadal sediment trap record from the Eastern Boundary Upwelling Ecosystem (EBUE) off Cape Blanc, Mauritania, is analysed with respect to deep ocean mass fluxes, flux components and their variability on seasonal to decadal timescales. The total mass flux revealed interannual fluctuations which were superimposed by fluctuations on decadal timescales. High winter fluxes of biogenic silica (BSi), used as a measure of marine production (mostly by diatoms) largely correspond to a positive North Atlantic Oscillation (NAO) index (December–March). However, this relationship is weak. The highest positive BSi anomaly was in winter 2004–2005 when the NAO was in a neutral state. More episodic BSi sedimentation events occurred in several summer seasons between 2001 and 2005, when the previous winter NAO was neutral or even negative. We suggest that distinct dust outbreaks and deposition in the surface ocean in winter and occasionally in summer/autumn enhanced particle sedimentation and carbon export on short timescales via the ballasting effect. Episodic perturbations of the marine carbon cycle by dust outbreaks (e.g. in 2005) might have weakened the relationships between fluxes and large-scale climatic oscillations. As phytoplankton biomass is high throughout the year, any dry (in winter) or wet (in summer) deposition of fine-grained dust particles is assumed to enhance the efficiency of the biological pump by incorporating dust into dense and fast settling organic-rich aggregates. A good correspondence between BSi and dust fluxes was observed for the dusty year 2005, following a period of rather dry conditions in the Sahara/Sahel region. Large changes of all bulk fluxes occurred during the strongest El Niño-Southern Oscillation (ENSO) in 1997–1999 where low fluxes were obtained for almost 1 year during the warm El Niño and high fluxes in the following cold La Niña phase. For decadal timescales, Bakun (1990) suggested an intensification of coastal upwelling due to increased winds (''Bakun upwelling intensification hypothesis''; Cropper et al., 2014) and global climate change. We did not observe an increase of any flux component off Cape Blanc during the past 2 and a half decades which might support this. Furthermore, fluxes of mineral dust did not show any positive or negative trends over time which might suggest enhanced desertification or ''Saharan greening'' during the last few decades.
    Print ISSN: 1726-4170
    Electronic ISSN: 1726-4189
    Topics: Biology , Geosciences
    Published by Copernicus on behalf of European Geosciences Union.
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  • 4
    Publication Date: 2020-04-22
    Description: Cruise M140 combined sampling of plankton, mineral dust and other particles in the water column with recovery of data and samples from long-term observational platforms (sediment traps and dust-collecting buoys). The aim of the cruise was to provide new observations to improve our understanding of the ecology of planktonic foraminifera as important carriers of paleoceanographic proxies and to investigate how mineral dust deposition and the production of marine snow and biogenic particle ballast vary in space and time and how they affect the marine biological pump. To this end, the cruise followed a transect in the central western Atlantic between oligotrophic waters of the subtropical gyre and the productive coastal waters off Mauretania affected by coastal upwelling. To characterise population dynamics, ecology and physiology of planktonic foraminifera, we obtained a series of fourteen vertically resolved plankton net profiles along the cruise track, together with profiles of physical and chemical properties of the ambient water masses. Live foraminifera extracted from these profiles were used to quantify photosynthetic activity of selected species and determine their photoadaptation. High-resolution spatial and temporal sampling of the upper 300 m over 24 hours was carried out at two locations (recovering 41 and 46 vertical profiles), allowing the characterisation of patchiness and daily vertical migration of planktonic foraminifera. Moorings with sediment traps monitoring the seasonal and short-term variability of particle fluxes and buoys monitoring atmospheric dust deposition in the region were successfully recovered in the central Atlantic (M3), south of Cabo Verde (M1) and off Mauretania (CB and CBi) and redeployed in the latter two regions to continue the monitoring. Short-term variability of sizes and types of sinking particles in the water column were characterised in each of the monitoring regions with drifting sediment traps and in the Cape Blanc region off Mauretania also with continuous vertical particle camera profile. All aims of the cruise have been met – the plankton sampling and particle characterization studies were carried out successfully and all moorings and buoys could be recovered and/or redeployed as planned.
    Type: Report , NonPeerReviewed
    Format: text
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  • 5
    Publication Date: 2024-02-02
    Description: A more than two-decadal sediment trap record from the Eastern Boundary Upwelling Ecosystem (EBUE) off Cape Blanc, Mauritania, is analysed with respect to deep ocean mass fluxes, flux components and their variability on seasonal to decadal timescales. The total mass flux revealed interannual fluctuations which were superimposed by fluctuations on decadal timescales. High winter fluxes of biogenic silica (BSi), used as a measure of marine production (mostly by diatoms) largely correspond to a positive North Atlantic Oscillation (NAO) index (December-March). However, this relationship is weak. The highest positive BSi anomaly was in winter 2004-2005 when the NAO was in a neutral state. More episodic BSi sedimentation events occurred in several summer seasons between 2001 and 2005, when the previous winter NAO was neutral or even negative. We suggest that distinct dust outbreaks and deposition in the surface ocean in winter and occasionally in summer/autumn enhanced particle sedimentation and carbon export on short timescales via the ballasting effect. Episodic perturbations of the marine carbon cycle by dust outbreaks (e.g. in 2005) might have weakened the relationships between fluxes and large-scale climatic oscillations. As phytoplankton biomass is high throughout the year, any dry (in winter) or wet (in summer) deposition of fine-grained dust particles is assumed to enhance the efficiency of the biological pump by incorporating dust into dense and fast settling organic-rich aggregates. A good correspondence between BSi and dust fluxes was observed for the dusty year 2005, following a period of rather dry conditions in the Sahara/Sahel region. Large changes of all bulk fluxes occurred during the strongest El Niño-Southern Oscillation (ENSO) in 1997-1999 where low fluxes were obtained for almost 1 year during the warm El Niño and high fluxes in the following cold La Niña phase. For decadal timescales, Bakun (1990) suggested an intensification of coastal upwelling due to increased winds (''Bakun upwelling intensification hypothesis''; Cropper et al., 2014) and global climate change. We did not observe an increase of any flux component off Cape Blanc during the past 2 and a half decades which might support this. Furthermore, fluxes of mineral dust did not show any positive or negative trends over time which might suggest enhanced desertification or ''Saharan greening'' during the last few decades.
    Keywords: Biogenic silica; Biogenic silica, flux, at time interval; Calcium carbonate, flux, at time interval; Calcium carbonate, flux of total flux; Cape Blanc; Carbon, organic, flux, at time interval; Carbon, organic, flux of total flux; CB1_trap; CB11; CB12; CB12_trap; CB13; CB13_trap; CB14; CB15; CB16; CB17; CB17_trap; CB18; CB18_trap; CB19; CB2_trap; CB20; CB21; CB22; CB3_trap; CB4_trap; CB5_trap; CB6; CB7; CB7_trap; CB8; CB9_trap; Center for Marine Environmental Sciences; Comment; Date; DATE/TIME; Date/time end; DEPTH, water; Duration, number of days; Event label; GeoB; Geosciences, University of Bremen; Lithogenic, flux, at time interval; Lithogenic, flux of total flux; M12/1; M16/2; M29/3; M6/6; M65/2; M9/4; Maria S. Merian; MARUM; Meteor (1986); MOOR; Mooring; MSM04/4b; Nitrogen, flux, at time interval; Nitrogen, flux of total flux; Northwest Africa; POS310; Poseidon; Sample code/label; Sample comment; Season; SFB261; South Atlantic in Late Quaternary: Reconstruction of Budget and Currents; Total mass, flux; Trap; TRAP
    Type: Dataset
    Format: text/tab-separated-values, 1402 data points
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