Biogeosciences (Mar 2015)

Organic carbon production, mineralisation and preservation on the Peruvian margin

  • A. W. Dale,
  • S. Sommer,
  • U. Lomnitz,
  • I. Montes,
  • T. Treude,
  • V. Liebetrau,
  • J. Gier,
  • C. Hensen,
  • M. Dengler,
  • K. Stolpovsky,
  • L. D. Bryant,
  • K. Wallmann

DOI
https://doi.org/10.5194/bg-12-1537-2015
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 5
pp. 1537 – 1559

Abstract

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Carbon cycling in Peruvian margin sediments (11 and 12° S) was examined at 16 stations, from 74 m water depth on the middle shelf down to 1024 m, using a combination of in situ flux measurements, sedimentary geochemistry and modelling. Bottom water oxygen was below detection limit down to ca. 400 m and increased to 53 μM at the deepest station. Sediment accumulation rates decreased sharply seaward of the middle shelf and subsequently increased at the deep stations. The organic carbon burial efficiency (CBE) was unusually low on the middle shelf (60%) at the deep oxygenated sites. In line with other studies, CBE was elevated under oxygen-deficient waters in the mid-water oxygen minimum zone. Organic carbon rain rates calculated from the benthic fluxes alluded to efficient mineralisation of organic matter in the water column compared to other oxygen-deficient environments. The observations at the Peruvian margin suggest that a lack of oxygen does not greatly affect the degradation of organic matter in the water column but promotes the preservation of organic matter in sediments.