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  • 2020-2024  (116)
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  • 1
    Publication Date: 2023-02-08
    Description: The thriving interest in harvesting deep-sea mineral resources, such as polymetallic nodules, calls for environmental impact studies, and ultimately, for regulations for environmental protection. Industrial-scale deep-sea mining of polymetallic nodules most likely has severe consequences for the natural environment. However, the effects of mining activities on deep-sea ecosystems, sediment geochemistry and element fluxes are still poorly conceived. Predicting the environmental impact is challenging due to the scarcity of environmental baseline studies as well as the lack of mining trials with industrial mining equipment in the deep sea. Thus, currently we have to rely on small-scale disturbances simulating deep-sea mining activities as a first-order approximation to study the expected impacts on the abyssal environment. Here, we investigate surface sediments in disturbance tracks of seven small-scale benthic impact experiments, which have been performed in four European contract areas for the exploration of polymetallic nodules in the Clarion-Clipperton Zone (CCZ). These small-scale disturbance experiments were performed 1 day to 37 years prior to our sampling program in the German, Polish, Belgian and French contract areas using different disturbance devices. We show that the depth distribution of solid-phase Mn in the upper 20 cm of the sediments in the CCZ provides a reliable tool for the determination of the disturbance depth, which has been proposed in a previous study (Paul et al., 2018). We found that the upper 5–15 cm of the sediments were removed during various small-scale disturbance experiments in the different exploration contract areas. Transient transport-reaction modelling for the Polish and German contract areas reveals that the removal of the surface sediments is associated with the loss of reactive labile organic carbon. As a result, oxygen consumption rates decrease significantly after the removal of the surface sediments, and consequently, oxygen penetrates up to tenfold deeper into the sediments inhibiting denitrification and Mn(IV) reduction. Our model results show that the post-disturbance geochemical re-equilibration is controlled by diffusion until the reactive labile TOC fraction in the surface sediments is partly re-established and the biogeochemical processes commence. While the re-establishment of bioturbation is essential, the geochemical re-equilibration of the sediments is ultimately controlled by the burial rates of organic matter. Hence, under current depositional conditions, the new geochemical equilibrium in the sediments of the CCZ is reached only on a millennia scale even for these small-scale disturbances simulating deep-sea mining activities.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
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  • 2
    Publication Date: 2023-02-08
    Description: Numerous studies have provided compelling evidence that the Pacific Ocean has experienced substantial glacial/interglacial changes in bottom-water oxygenation associated with enhanced carbon dioxide storage in the glacial deep ocean. Under postulated low glacial bottom-water oxygen concentrations (O), redox zonation, biogeochemical processes and element fluxes in the sediments must have been distinctively different during the last glacial period (LGP) compared to current well-oxygenated conditions. In this study, we have investigated six sites situated in various European contract areas for the exploration of polymetallic nodules within the Clarion-Clipperton Zone (CCZ) in the NE Pacific and one site located in a protected Area of Particular Environmental Interest (APEI3) north of the CCZ. We found bulk sediment Mn maxima of up to 1 wt% in the upper oxic 10 cm of the sediments at all sites except for the APEI3 site. The application of a combined leaching protocol for the extraction of sedimentary Mn and Fe minerals revealed that mobilizable Mn(IV) represents the dominant Mn(oxyhydr)oxide phase with more than 70% of bulk solid-phase Mn. Steady state transport-reaction modeling showed that at postulated glacial O of 35 μM, the oxic zone in the sediments was much more compressed than today where upward diffusing pore-water Mn2+ was oxidized and precipitated as authigenic Mn(IV) at the oxic-suboxic redox boundary in the upper 5 cm of the sediments. Transient transport-reaction modeling demonstrated that with increasing O during the last glacial termination to current levels of ∼ 150 μM, (1) the oxic-suboxic redox boundary migrated deeper into the sediments and (2) the authigenic Mn(IV) peak was continuously mixed into subsequently deposited sediments by bioturbation causing the observed mobilizable Mn(IV) enrichment in the surface sediments. Such a distinct mobilizable Mn(IV) maximum was not found in the surface sediments of the APEI3 site, which indicates that the oxic zone was not as condensed during the LGP at this site due to two- to threefold lower organic carbon burial rates. Leaching data for sedimentary Fe minerals suggest that Fe(III) has not been diagenetically redistributed during the LGP at any of the investigated sites. Our results demonstrate that the basin-wide deoxygenation in the NE Pacific during the LGP was associated with (1) a much more compressed oxic zone at sites with carbon burial fluxes higher than 1.5 mg Corg m−2 d−1, (2) the authigenic formation of a sub-surface mobilizable Mn(IV) maximum in the upper 5 cm of the sediments and (3) a possibly intensified suboxic-diagenetic growth of polymetallic nodules. As our study provides evidence that authigenic Mn(IV) precipitated in the surface sediments under postulated low glacial O, it contributes to resolving a long-standing controversy concerning the origin of widely observed Mn-rich layers in glacial/deglacial deep-sea sediments.
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  • 3
    Publication Date: 2023-11-24
    Type: Conference or Workshop Item , NonPeerReviewed
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  • 4
    Publication Date: 2023-11-29
    Description: Iron is an essential micronutrient often limiting the growth of marine microorganisms in wide areas of the world’s oceans. In high concentrations, iron, by contrast, is potentially toxic and usually leads to irreversible cell encrustation followed by cell death. To counteract both, microorganisms have evolved the strategy of producing organic iron-binding molecules, so called iron-ligands, enabling them to improve the bioavailability and uptake of iron as well as to mitigate its potentially toxic effects. Hydrothermal vents are among the major sources of iron in the oceans. These dynamic habitats host a variety of metabolically highly specialized and versatile microbes that not only have to cope with partially high iron concentrations but may also be able to mediate the availability of inorganic hydrothermal iron by actively producing iron-ligands. However, hardly any information exists to-date describing the impact of increasing iron concentrations on hydrothermal plume microbial communities and their potential to form iron-ligands. We therefore set up microcosm experiments with hydrothermal plume material in artificial seawater along an iron gradient ranging from 0 to 10 mM. We found that the microbial community at low iron concentrations (0.1 to 100 μM) differs significantly from that found in the original non-treated plume sample, allowing a certain group of Epsilonproteobacteria to become dominant (up to 93% of the overall community). The microbial community detected at 10 mM is by contrast more similar to that found in the original plume sample and consists mainly of one gammaproteobacterial group (up to 97% of the overall community). We further analyzed these results in the context of ligand concentrations and structural diversity and found indications for microbially mediated iron-ligand formation. This is the first holistic experimental approach linking studies of hydrothermal vent microbial community composition with the geochemistry involved in organic iron-ligand formation.
    Type: Conference or Workshop Item , NonPeerReviewed
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  • 5
    Publication Date: 2024-02-07
    Description: Highlights • Cu speciation was investigated for the first time in the South-East Atlantic using CLE-AdCSV. • [Cu2+] were mostly below the putative biolimiting threshold of various marine microorganisms. • Cu speciation parameters showed a poor correlation with assessed biogeochemical parameters. • Spatial differences in Cu speciation parameters suggest that biogeochemical processes and sources strongly influence Cu speciation. Organic ligands play a key role in the marine biogeochemical cycle of copper (Cu), a bio-essential element, regulating its solubility and bioavailability. However, the sources, abundance, and distribution of these ligands are still poorly understood. In this study, we examined vertical Cu speciation profiles from the South-East Atlantic (GEOTRACES section GA08). Profiles were collected from a range of ocean conditions, including the Benguela upwelling region, the oligotrophic South Atlantic Gyre, and the Congo River outflow. In general, the lack of a significant correlation between most of the parameters assessed here with Cu speciation data obscures the provenance of Cu-binding ligands, suggesting that Cu speciation in the South-East Atlantic is influenced by a complex interplay between biotic and abiotic processes. Nevertheless, the total dissolved Cu (CuT) illustrated an allochthonous origin in the working area, while Cu-binding ligands showed both an allochthonous and a biogenic, autochthonous origin. Pigment concentrations showed that the phylogeography of different microorganisms influenced the spatial features of the Cu-binding ligand pool in the South-East Atlantic. Allochthonous Cu-binding ligand sources in the upper water column are likely associated with dissolved organic matter which originated from the Congo River and the Benguela upwelling system. Deep water ligand sources could include refractory dissolved organic carbon (DOC), resuspended benthic inputs, and lateral advected inputs from the shelf margin. The degradation of L1-type ligands and/or siderophores in low oxygen conditions may also be a source of L2-type ligands in the deep. Free Cu ion levels (1.7 to 156 fM), the biologically available form of CuT, were below the putative biolimiting threshold of many marine organisms. Two classes of ligands were found in this study with total ligand concentrations ([LT]) ranging from 2.5 to 283.0 nM and conditional stability constants (logKCuL, Cu2+cond) ranging from 10.7 to 14.6. The Cu speciation values were spatially variable across the three subregions, suggesting that biogeochemical processes and sources strongly influence Cu speciation. Highlights • Cu speciation was investigated for the first time in the South-East Atlantic using CLE-AdCSV. • [Cu2+] were mostly below the putative biolimiting threshold of various marine microorganisms. • Cu speciation parameters showed a poor correlation with assessed biogeochemical parameters. • Spatial differences in Cu speciation parameters suggest that biogeochemical processes and sources strongly influence Cu speciation.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed , info:eu-repo/semantics/article
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  • 6
    Publication Date: 2024-02-07
    Description: The Amazon River has the largest drainage basin in the world, making it a major source of trace elements and dissolved organic matter (DOM) to the Atlantic Ocean. However, despite the increasing anthropogenic impacts to the Amazon basin, few recent studies exist quantifying trace element data in this region. The aim of the study was to analyze the input and removal processes that influence the transport of Ni and Co species in the Amazon and Pará River estuaries and mixing zone. Toward this goal, this work provides a comprehensive mixing and speciation study for the trace elements Ni and Co. Samples were collected during a period of high river discharge on the RV Meteor cruise M147 (Amazon – GEOTRACES process study GApr11) in the Amazon and Pará River outflow regions, as well as the aging mixing plume to the north, a mangrove belt to the southeast and the North Brazil Current (NBC) seawater endmember. Here we present the results for labile particulate (〉0.2 μm), labile and total dissolved (〈0.2 μm), large colloidal (0.015–0.2 μm), soluble (〈0.015 μm) and ultrafiltered (〈1 and 〈 10 kDa) fractions of Ni and Co in surface waters (towed-fish) and along the water column at different depths (CTD) samples using comparative approaches by adsorptive cathodic stripping voltammetry (AdCSV) and inductively coupled plasma-mass spectrometry (ICP-MS). We observed good agreement between AdCSV and ICP-MS measurements for Ni, and to a lesser extent Co. In general, dissolved and soluble Ni and Co decreased with increasing salinity, however additional non-conservative removal was also observed and attributed to possible biological uptake and colloidal flocculation. Shipboard AdCSV measurements showed that dissolved Ni was present mostly in the “reactive” form as weak complexes, suggesting high bioavailability, while reactive dissolved Co was absent, indicating the presence of strong organic Co complexes. In both Ni and Co, an elevated colloidal fraction was observed at low salinity, suggesting removal of dissolved Ni and Co via colloidal flocculation upon seawater mixing, while the soluble species were transported to the Atlantic Ocean. At depth, the soluble phase dominated, and we observed concentration maxima at 500–1000 m, indicating the presence of Antarctic Intermediate Water (AIW) and possible biological regeneration. We also observed unique source signatures in dissolved and labile particulate Ni and Co species from the Amazon and Pará River outflow regions, in addition to a contribution from mangrove belt-associated groundwater.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed , info:eu-repo/semantics/article
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  • 7
    Publication Date: 2024-02-07
    Description: The release of potentially toxic metals, such as copper (Cu), into the water column is of concern during polymetallic nodule mining. The bioavailability and thus toxicity of Cu is strongly influenced by its speciation which is dominated by organic ligand (L) complexation in seawater, with L-complexes being considered less bioavailable than free Cu 2+ . The presence of CuL-complexes in deep-sea sediments has, however, not been systematically studied in the context of deep-sea mining. We thus analyzed the Cu-binding L concentration ([L]) in deep-sea pore waters of two polymetallic nodule provinces in the Pacific Ocean, the Peru Basin and the Clarion-Clipperton-Zone, using competitive ligand equilibration–adsorptive stripping voltammetry. The pore-water dissolved Cu concentration ([dCu]) ranged from 3 to 96 nM, generally exceeding bottom water concentrations (4–44 nM). Based on fitting results from ProMCC and Excel, Cu was predominantly complexed by L (3–313 nM) in bottom waters and undisturbed pore waters. We conclude that processes like deep-sea mining are unlikely to cause a release of toxic Cu 2+ concentrations ([Cu 2+ ]) to the seawater as 〉 99% Cu was organically complexed in pore waters and the [Cu 2+ ] was 〈 6 pM for 8 of 9 samples. Moreover, the excess of L found especially in shallow pore waters implied that even with a Cu release through mining activities, Cu 2+ likely remains beneath toxic thresholds.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed , info:eu-repo/semantics/article
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  • 8
    Publication Date: 2024-02-07
    Description: Hydrothermal vents are a source of many trace metals to the oceans. Compared to mid-ocean ridges, hydrothermal vent systems at arcs occur in shallower water depth and are much more diverse in fluid composition, resulting in highly variable water column trace metal concentrations. However, only few studies have focused on trace metal dynamics in hydrothermal plumes at volcanic arcs. During R/V Sonne cruise SO253 in 2016/2017, hydrothermal plumes from two hydrothermally active submarine volcanoes along the Kermadec arc in the Southwest Pacific Ocean were sampled: (1) Macauley, a magmatic dominated vent site located in water depths between 300 and 680 m, and (2) Brothers, located between 1,200 and 1,600 m water depth, where hydrothermalism influenced by water rock interactions and magmatically influenced vent sites occur near each other. Surface currents estimated from satellite-altimeter derived currents and direct measurements at the sites using lowered acoustic Doppler current profilers indicate the oceanic regime is dominated by mesoscale eddies. At both volcanoes, results indicated strong plumes of dissolved trace metals, notably Mn, Fe, Co, Ni, Cu, Zn, Cd, La, and Pb, some of which are essential micronutrients. Dissolved metal concentrations commonly decreased with distance from the vents, as to be expected, however, certain element/Fe ratios increased, suggesting a higher solubility of these elements and/or their stronger stabilization (e.g., for Zn compared to Fe). Our data indicate that at the magmatically influenced Macauley and Brothers cone sites, the transport of trace metals is strongly controlled by sulfide nanoparticles, while at the Brothers NW caldera wall site iron oxyhydroxides seem to dominate the trace metal transport over sulfides. Solution stabilization of trace metals by organic complexation appears to compete with particle adsorption processes. As well as extending the generally sparse data set for hydrothermal plumes at volcanic arc systems, our study presents the first data on several dissolved trace metals in the Macauley system, and extends the existing plume dataset of Brothers volcano. Our data further indicate that chemical signatures and processes at arc volcanoes are highly diverse, even on small scales.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed , info:eu-repo/semantics/article
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  • 9
    Publication Date: 2024-02-07
    Description: Dissolved organic matter (DOM) is a distinct component of Earth’s hydrosphere and provides a link between the biogeochemical cycles of carbon, nutrients, and trace metals (TMs). Binding of TMs to DOM is thought to result in a TM pool with DOM-like biogeochemistry. Here, we determined elemental stoichiometries of aluminum, iron, copper, nickel, zinc, cobalt, and manganese associated with a fraction of the DOM pool isolated by solid-phase extraction at ambient pH (DOM SPE-amb ) from the Amazon plume. We found that the rank order of TM stoichiometry within the DOM SPE-amb fraction was underpinned by the chemical periodicity of the TM. Furthermore, the removal of the TM SPE-amb pool at low salinity was related to the chemical hardness of the TM ion. Thus, the biogeochemistry of TMs bound to the DOM SPE-amb component in the Amazon plume was determined by the chemical nature of the TM and not by that of the DOM SPE-amb . Metal chemistry controls biogeochemistry of metals bound to organic matter in the Amazon plume.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed , info:eu-repo/semantics/article
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  • 10
    Publication Date: 2024-02-07
    Description: Exchange of dissolved substances at the sediment–water interface provides an important link between the short–term and long–term geochemical cycles in the ocean. A second, as yet poorly understood sediment–water exchange is supported by low–temperature circulation of seawater through the oceanic basement underneath the sediments. From the basement, upwards diffusing oxygen and other dissolved species modify the sediment whereas reaction products diffuse from the sediment down into the basement, where they are transported by the basement fluid and released to the ocean. Here, we investigate the impact of this “second” route with respect to transport, release and consumption of oxygen, nitrate, manganese, nickel, and cobalt on the basis of sediment cores retrieved from the Clarion Clipperton Zone (CCZ) in the equatorial Pacific Ocean. We show that in this abyssal ocean region characterised by low organic–carbon burial and sedimentation rates vast areas exist where the downward and upward directed diffusive fluxes of oxygen meet so that the sediments are oxic throughout. This is especially the case where sediments are thin or in the proximity of faults. Oxygen diffusing upward from the basaltic crust into the sediment contributes to the degradation of sedimentary organic matter. Where the oxygen profiles do not meet, they are separated by a suboxic sediment interval characterised by Mn2+ in the pore–water. Where the sediments are entirely oxic, nitrate produced in the upper sediment by nitrification is lost both by upward diffusion into the bottom water and by downward diffusion into the fluids circulating within the basement. Where pore–water manganese in the suboxic zones remains low, nitrate consumption is low and the sediment continues to deliver nitrate to the ocean bottom waters and basement fluid. We observe that at elevated pore–water manganese concentrations, nitrate consumption exceeds production and the basement becomes a nitrate source. Within the suboxic zone, not only manganese but also cobalt and nickel are released into the pore–water by reduction of oxides, diffuse towards the oxic/suboxic fronts above and below where they precipitate, effectively removing these metals from the suboxic zone and concentrating them at the oxic/suboxic redox boundaries. We show that not only diffusive fluxes in the top part of deep–sea sediments modify the geochemical composition over time, but also diffusive fluxes of dissolved constituents from the basement into the bottom layers of the sediment. Hence, paleoceanographic interpretation of sedimentary layers should carefully consider such deep secondary modifications in order to prevent misinterpretation as primary signatures.
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