Published in

European Geosciences Union, Biogeosciences, 13(13), p. 3901-3913, 2016

DOI: 10.5194/bg-13-3901-2016

European Geosciences Union, Biogeosciences Discussions, 20(12), p. 17507-17541

DOI: 10.5194/bgd-12-17507-2015

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No observed effect of ocean acidification on nitrogen biogeochemistry in a summer Baltic Sea plankton community

This paper is made freely available by the publisher.
This paper is made freely available by the publisher.

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Data provided by SHERPA/RoMEO

Abstract

Nitrogen fixation by filamentous cyanobacteria supplies significant amounts of new nitrogen (N) to the Baltic Sea. This balances N loss processes such as denitrification and anammox, and forms an important N source supporting primary and secondary production in N-limited postspring bloom plankton communities. Laboratory studies suggest that filamentous diazotrophic cyanobacteria growth and N-2-fixation rates are sensitive to ocean acidification, with potential implications for new N supply to the Baltic Sea. In this study, our aim was to assess the effect of ocean acidification on diazotroph growth and activity as well as the contribution of diazotrophically fixed N to N supply in a natural plankton assemblage. We enclosed a natural plankton community in a summer season in the Baltic Sea near the entrance to the Gulf of Finland in six large-scale mesocosms (volume similar to 55m(3)) and manipulated f CO2 over a range relevant for projected ocean acidification by the end of this century (average treatment f CO2: 365-1231 mu atm). The direct response of diazotroph growth and activity was followed in the mesocosms over a 47 day study period during N-limited growth in the summer plankton community. Diazotrophic filamentous cyanobacteria abundance throughout the study period and N-2-fixation rates (determined only until day 21 due to subsequent use of contaminated commercial N-15-N-2 gas stocks) remained low. Thus estimated new N inputs from diazotrophy were too low to relieve N limitation and stimulate a summer phytoplankton bloom. Instead, regeneration of organic N sources likely sustained growth in the plankton community. We could not detect significant CO2-related differences in neither inorganic nor organic N pool sizes, or partic-ulate matter N:P stoichiometry. Additionally, no significant effect of elevated CO2 on diazotroph activity was observed. Therefore, ocean acidification had no observable impact on N cycling or biogeochemistry in this N-limited, post-spring bloom plankton assemblage in the Baltic Sea.