D'Hondt, Steven et al. (2009): Subseafloor sedimentary life in the South Pacific Gyre

Leg/Site/Hole:
ODP 201
ODP 201 1225
ODP 201 1226
ODP 201 1227
ODP 201 1230
ODP 201 1231
Identifier:
2011-038149
georefid

10.1073/pnas.0811793106
doi

Creator:
D'Hondt, Steven
University of Rhode Island, Graduate School of Oceanography, Narragansett, RI, United States
author

Spivack, Arthur J.
Max Planck Institute for Marine Microbiology, Germany
author

Pockalny, Robert
University of Potsdam, Germany
author

Ferdelman, Timothy G.
University of North Carolina at Wilmington, United States
author

Fischer, Jan P.
University of Michigan, United States
author

Kallmeyer, Jens
author

Abrams, Lewis J.
author

Smith, David C.
author

Graham, Dennis
author

Hasiuk, Franciszek J.
author

Schrum, Heather
author

Stancin, Andrea M.
author

Identification:
Subseafloor sedimentary life in the South Pacific Gyre
2009
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
National Academy of Sciences, Washington, DC, United States
106
28
11651-11656
The low-productivity South Pacific Gyre (SPG) is Earth's largest oceanic province. Its sediment accumulates extraordinarily slowly (0.1-1 m per million years). This sediment contains a living community that is characterized by very low biomass and very low metabolic activity. At every depth in cored SPG sediment, mean cell abundances are 3 to 4 orders of magnitude lower than at the same depths in all previously explored subseafloor communities. The net rate of respiration by the subseafloor sedimentary community at each SPG site is 1 to 3 orders of magnitude lower than the rates at previously explored sites. Because of the low respiration rates and the thinness of the sediment, interstitial waters are oxic throughout the sediment column in most of this region. Consequently, the sedimentary community of the SPG is predominantly aerobic, unlike previously explored subseafloor communities. Generation of H (sub 2) by radiolysis of water is a significant electron-donor source for this community. The per-cell respiration rates of this community are about 2 orders of magnitude higher (in oxidation/reduction equivalents) than in previously explored anaerobic subseafloor communities. Respiration rates and cell concentrations in subseafloor sediment throughout almost half of the world ocean may approach those in SPG sediment.
English
Serial
Coverage:Geographic coordinates:
North:-3.0600
West:-90.4900East: 166.0000
South:-46.0000

Oceanography; aerobic environment; biomass; burial; carbon; Cenozoic; chlorophyll; cores; Cretaceous; East Pacific; ecology; Equatorial Pacific; hydrogen; Leg 201; marine environment; marine sediments; Mesozoic; North Pacific; Northeast Pacific; Ocean Drilling Program; ODP Site 1225; ODP Site 1226; ODP Site 1227; ODP Site 1230; ODP Site 1231; organic carbon; organic compounds; oxygen; Pacific Ocean; Peru-Chile Trench; pigments; porphyrins; productivity; respiration; sedimentation; sedimentation rates; sediments; South Pacific; South Pacific Gyre; Southeast Pacific; Upper Cretaceous; water;

.