Particulate nitrogen concentrations, N isotopic composition, and nitrate isotopic composition from EN532

Website: https://www.bco-dmo.org/dataset/652025
Data Type: Cruise Results
Version: 2
Version Date: 2016-07-15

Project
» Functional diversity of marine eukaryotic phytoplankton and their contributions to the C and N cycling (DimBio NABE)

Program
» Dimensions of Biodiversity (Dimensions of Biodiversity)
ContributorsAffiliationRole
Ward, Bess B.Princeton UniversityPrincipal Investigator, Contact
Allen, Andrew E.J. Craig Venter Institute (JCVI)Co-Principal Investigator
Sigman, Daniel M.Princeton UniversityScientist
Van Oostende, Nicolas C.Princeton UniversityContact
Copley, NancyWoods Hole Oceanographic Institution (WHOI BCO-DMO)BCO-DMO Data Manager


Dataset Description

Pico- and nanoplankton cell concentrations from CTD casts made during the August-September 2013 EN532 and April-May 2014 EN358 cruises aboard R/V Endeavor. Study sites in the subarctic Atlantic Ocean along the 20 °W meridian between 50 °N and 60 °N in September 2013 and May 2014. Two transects from the US East coast to the subarctic study sites were performed as well.

Related Dataset:
EN532 - CTD
EN538 - CTD
Chlorophyll-a: EN532 and EN538
Nutrients: EN532 and EN538
FCM: EN532 and EN538


Methods & Sampling

Seawater samples for analysis of the N isotopic composition of nitrate+nitrite and nitrate-only were collected unfiltered at regular depth intervals from the surface to 1000 m in 60 ml (>150 m) or 125 ml (<150 m) square-bottomed, wide-mouth HDPE bottles (Nalgene). Bottles were acid-washed and rinsed with deionized water prior to sampling. At sea, pre-labelled bottles and caps were rinsed three times with sample water, filled to ~85% of the bottle volume, and frozen upright at -20°C until analysis.

Isotopic analyses were conducted using the “denitrifier method”, wherein denitrifying bacteria lacking nitrous oxide (N2O) reductase quantitatively convert nitrate and nitrite in the sample to N2O gas (Sigman et al. 2001, Casciotti et al. 2002) (see also (Weigand et al. in review) for the updated protocol used for analyzing these samples). The isotopic composition of N2O was then measured by gas chromatography-isotope ratio mass spectrometry (GC-IRMS) using a purpose-built on-line N2O extraction and purification system and a Thermo MAT 253 mass spectrometer. Seawater solutions of the international nitrate reference materials, IAEA-N3 and USGS34, as well as an in-house N2O standard, were run in parallel to the samples in order to monitor the quality of bacterial N conversion and mass spectrometric measurements. The reference materials bracketed each group of ~10 samples and were used to correct the measured δ15N to N2 in air (Sigman et al. 2001, Casciotti et al. 2002, McIlvin & Casciotti 2011).       

The measurement of the 15N of nitrate-only for samples with a detectable concentration of nitrite required a nitrite removal pre-treatment. The detection limit for nitrite in this case was 2 nmol kg-1. Samples collected between the surface and ~125 m were treated for nitrite removal via the addition of 10 µl of sulphamic acid solution per ml of sample, which converts sample nitrite to N2 gas with a reaction time of 2-8 minutes, followed by the addition of 5.5 µl of 2M NaOH per ml of sample to restore the pH of the sample to ~7-9 (Granger & Sigman 2009). The pooled standard error for 15N was 0.04‰ and 0.11‰ (n ≥3) for nitrate+nitrite and nitrate concentrations ≥0.5 µmol l-1 and <0.5 µmol l-1, respectively. Hereafter, “nitrate” in the text refers to nitrate-only, after the subtraction (for concentration) or removal (for 15N) of nitrite.

Suspended particulate N: Suspended PN was collected at various depths throughout the euphotic zone, including within the surface mixed layer and at the depth of maximum chlorophyll concentration, by gentle vacuum filtration (<135 mbar), of 8 l of seawater through a GF-75 filter. Filters were transferred to pre-combusted (500°C for 5 h) aluminium foil envelopes, and immediately frozen at -80°C until analysis. In the laboratory, the PN filters were dried in a desiccating oven at 40°C. Three subsamples were cored from each filter and transferred to combusted 4 mL glass Wheaton vials. PN was oxidised to nitrate using the persulphate oxidation method of Knapp et al. (2005), and as modified by Fawcett et al. (2011; 2014); this was conducted in a laminar flow hood equipped with an ammonia/amine filter. Briefly, 2 ml of persulphate oxidizing reagent (POR) were added to each sample vial, as well as to triplicate vials containing a filter blank plus varying quantities of two L-glutamic acid isotope standards, USGS-40 and USGS-41 (Qi et al. 2003); this allows determination of the N content and 15N of the POR+filter blank. The POR was made by dissolving 2.5 g of 4× recrystallised, methanol-rinsed potassium persulphate and 2.5 g of sodium hydroxide in 100 ml of ultra high-purity deionised water. Following POR addition, vials were autoclaved at 121°C for 55 minutes on a slow-vent setting, after which sample pH was lowered to 5-8 using 12N HCl. The concentration and δ15N of the resultant nitrate was measured via chemiluminescent analysis (Braman & Hendrix 1989) and the denitrifier method (see above) (Sigman et al. 2001, Casciotti et al. 2002). The final N content and δ15N of the oxidised samples was corrected for the POR+filter blank. N content was converted to PN concentration by normalising to whole-filter area and volume of seawater filtered.

References:

Braman RS, Hendrix SA (1989) Nanogram nitrite and nitrate determination in environmental and biological materials by vanadium(iii) reduction with chemi-luminescence detection. Anal Chem 61:2715-2718

Casciotti K, Sigman D, Hastings MG, Böhlke J, Hilkert A (2002) Measurement of the oxygen isotopic composition of nitrate in seawater and freshwater using the denitrifier method. Anal Chem 74:4905-4912

Fawcett SE, Lomas M, Casey JR, Ward BB, Sigman DM (2011) Assimilation of upwelled nitrate by small eukaryotes in the Sargasso Sea. Nature Geoscience 4:717-722

Fawcett SE, Lomas MW, Ward BB, Sigman DM (2014) The counterintuitive effect of summer‐to‐fall mixed layer deepening on eukaryotic new production in the Sargasso Sea. Glob Biogeochem Cycle 28:86-102

Granger J, Sigman DM (2009) Removal of nitrite with sulfamic acid for nitrate N and O isotope analysis with the denitrifier method. Rapid Commun Mass Spectrom 23:3753-3762

Knapp AN, Sigman DM, Lipschultz F (2005) N isotopic composition of dissolved organic nitrogen and nitrate at the Bermuda Atlantic Time‐series Study site. Glob Biogeochem Cycle 19

McIlvin MR, Casciotti KL (2011) Technical updates to the bacterial method for nitrate isotopic analyses. Anal Chem 83:1850-1856

Qi H, Coplen TB, Geilmann H, Brand WA, Böhlke J (2003) Two new organic reference materials for δ13C and δ15N measurements and a new value for the δ13C of NBS 22 oil. Rapid Commun Mass Spectrom 17:2483-2487

Sigman D, Casciotti K, Andreani M, Barford C, Galanter M, Böhlke J (2001) A bacterial method for the nitrogen isotopic analysis of nitrate in seawater and freshwater. Anal Chem 73:4145-4153

Weigand MA, Foriel J, Barnett B, Oleynik S, Sigman DM (in review) Updates to instrumentation and protocols for isotopic analysis of nitrate by the denitrifier method. Rapid Commun Mass Spectrom


Data Processing Description

Standard deviations are derived from at least two analytical measurements

BCO-DMO Processing:

- added conventional header with dataset name, PI name, version date
- renamed parameters to BCO-DMO standard
- replaced blank cells with nd
- formatted lat and long to 4 decimal places

- replaced original 2016-07-13 EN532 data with new version submitted 2017-07-14. Cast numbers were rearranged.


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Data Files

File
EN532_PN_NO3_isotopes.csv
(Comma Separated Values (.csv), 22.96 KB)
MD5:e2d7b2af5ee17f5382b2891483a63299
Primary data file for dataset ID 652025

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Related Datasets

IsRelatedTo
Ward, B. B., Allen, A. E., Sigman, D. M. (2022) Chlorophyll-a concentrations from CTD cast deployments and underway seawater inflow from Endeavor 532 and Endeavor 538 cruises in 2013 and 2014. Biological and Chemical Oceanography Data Management Office (BCO-DMO). (Version 2) Version Date 2017-07-17 doi:10.26008/1912/bco-dmo.651784.2 [view at BCO-DMO]

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Parameters

ParameterDescriptionUnits
cruise_idcruise identification unitless
castcast number unitless
ISO_DateTime_UTCUTC day and decimal time; as 326.5 for the 326th day of the year or November 22 at 1200 hours (noon). yrday_utc
latlatitude; north is positive decimal degrees
lonlongitude; east is positive decimal degrees
depthdepth meters
PN_muMparticulate nitrogen concentration umol/liter
SD_PN_muMstandard deviation of particulate nitrogen concentration umol/liter
d15NPN_permildelta 15N vs. atmospheric N2 of particulate nitrogen per mille
SDd15NPN_permilstandard deviation of delta 15N vs. atmospheric N2 of particulate nitrogen per mille
d15NNO3NO2_permildelta 15N vs. atmospheric N2 of nitrate+nitrite per mille
SDd15NNO3NO2_permilstandard deviation of delta 15N vs. atmospheric N2 of nitrate+nitrite per mille
d18ONO3NO2_permildelta 18O vs. VSMOW of nitrate+nitrite per mille
SDd18ONO3NO2_permilstandard deviation of delta 18O vs. VSMOW of nitrate+nitrite per mille
d15NNO3_permildelta 15N vs. atmospheric N2 of nitrate per mille
SDd15NNO3_permilstandard deviation of delta 15N vs. atmospheric N2 of nitrate per mille
d18ONO3_permildelta 18O vs. VSMOW of nitrate per mille
SDd18ONO3_permilstandard deviation of delta 18O vs. VSMOW of nitrate per mille


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Instruments

Dataset-specific Instrument Name
Generic Instrument Name
Niskin bottle
Generic Instrument Description
A Niskin bottle (a next generation water sampler based on the Nansen bottle) is a cylindrical, non-metallic water collection device with stoppers at both ends. The bottles can be attached individually on a hydrowire or deployed in 12, 24, or 36 bottle Rosette systems mounted on a frame and combined with a CTD. Niskin bottles are used to collect discrete water samples for a range of measurements including pigments, nutrients, plankton, etc.

Dataset-specific Instrument Name
GC-IRMS
Generic Instrument Name
Isotope-ratio Mass Spectrometer
Dataset-specific Description
Thermo MAT 253 mass spectrometer
Generic Instrument Description
The Isotope-ratio Mass Spectrometer is a particular type of mass spectrometer used to measure the relative abundance of isotopes in a given sample (e.g. VG Prism II Isotope Ratio Mass-Spectrometer).

Dataset-specific Instrument Name
Generic Instrument Name
CTD Sea-Bird SBE 911plus
Generic Instrument Description
The Sea-Bird SBE 911 plus is a type of CTD instrument package for continuous measurement of conductivity, temperature and pressure. The SBE 911 plus includes the SBE 9plus Underwater Unit and the SBE 11plus Deck Unit (for real-time readout using conductive wire) for deployment from a vessel. The combination of the SBE 9 plus and SBE 11 plus is called a SBE 911 plus. The SBE 9 plus uses Sea-Bird's standard modular temperature and conductivity sensors (SBE 3 plus and SBE 4). The SBE 9 plus CTD can be configured with up to eight auxiliary sensors to measure other parameters including dissolved oxygen, pH, turbidity, fluorescence, light (PAR), light transmission, etc.). more information from Sea-Bird Electronics


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Deployments

EN532

Website
Platform
R/V Endeavor
Report
Start Date
2013-08-22
End Date
2013-09-15
Description
Study sites in the subtropical North-Atlantic Ocean near the Bermuda Atlantic Time Series in February 2012 and August 2012, and in the subarctic Atlantic Ocean along the 20W meridian between 50N and 60N in September 2013 and May 2014. Two transects from the US East coast to the subarctic study sites were performed as well.


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Project Information

Functional diversity of marine eukaryotic phytoplankton and their contributions to the C and N cycling (DimBio NABE)

Coverage: North Atlantic Ocean, transects from southwest to northeast


This project will investigate the taxonomic, genetic and functional diversity of eukaryotic phytoplankton at two North Atlantic sites (subarctic and subtropical) in two seasons.  The PIs will use diagnostic microarrays for community analysis based on functional genes (both DNA and RNA) and next generation sequencing (i.e., transcriptomics using 454 technology) to identify the players, both in terms of community composition and activity, and to explore the functional diversity of the natural assemblage. In order to identify which groups are active in C and N assimilation and which N source is being utilized by the different size and functional groups, both filter-separated and flow cytometry-sorted samples will be used to 1) measure 13C primary production and 15N assimilation by incubations with isotope tracers, 2) measure the natural stable N isotope signatures of different taxonomic groups and 3) link the molecular diversity to the functional diversity in C and N transformations. Using flow cytometry linked to mass spectrometry, these investigators have found an unexpectedly strong differentiation in the form of N assimilated by prokaryotes and eukaryotes, with eukaryotes being more dynamic.

This project will investigate the taxonomic, genetic and functional diversity of eukaryotic phytoplankton and to link this diversity and assemblage composition to the carbon and nitrogen biogeochemistry of the surface ocean. Taxonomic diversity will be investigated by identifying the components of the phytoplankton assemblages using molecular, chemical and microscope methods. Genetic diversity will be explored at several levels, including direct sequencing of clone libraries of key functional genes and metatranscriptomic sequencing and microarray analysis of size fractionated/sorted phytoplankton assemblages. Using natural abundance and tracer stable isotope methods, genetic and taxonomic diversity will be linked to functional diversity in C and N assimilation in size- fractionated and taxon-sorted populations.



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Program Information

Dimensions of Biodiversity (Dimensions of Biodiversity)


Coverage: global


(adapted from the NSF Synopsis of Program)
Dimensions of Biodiversity is a program solicitation from the NSF Directorate for Biological Sciences. FY 2010 was year one of the program.  [MORE from NSF]

The NSF Dimensions of Biodiversity program seeks to characterize biodiversity on Earth by using integrative, innovative approaches to fill rapidly the most substantial gaps in our understanding. The program will take a broad view of biodiversity, and in its initial phase will focus on the integration of genetic, taxonomic, and functional dimensions of biodiversity. Project investigators are encouraged to integrate these three dimensions to understand the interactions and feedbacks among them. While this focus complements several core NSF programs, it differs by requiring that multiple dimensions of biodiversity be addressed simultaneously, to understand the roles of biodiversity in critical ecological and evolutionary processes.



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Funding

Funding SourceAward
NSF Division of Ocean Sciences (NSF OCE)

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