posted on 2023-05-19, 16:07authored byBaker, CA, Henson, SA, Emma Cavan, Giering, SLC, Yool, A, Gehlen, M, Belcher, A, Riley, JS, Smith, HEK, Sanders, R
The remineralization depth of particulate organic carbon (POC) fluxes exported from the surface ocean exerts a major control over atmospheric CO₂ levels. According to a long-held paradigm most of the POC exported to depth is associated with large particles. However, recent lines of evidence suggest that slow-sinking POC (SS<sub>POC</sub>) may be an important contributor to this flux. Here we assess the circumstances under which this occurs. Our study uses samples collected using the Marine Snow Catcher throughout the Atlantic Ocean, from high latitudes to midlatitudes. We find median SS<sub>POC</sub> concentrations of 5.5 μg L<sup>−1</sup>, 13 times smaller than suspended POC concentrations and 75 times higher than median fast-sinking POC (FS<sub>POC</sub>) concentrations (0.07 μg L<sup>−1</sup>). Export fluxes of SS<sub>POC</sub> generally exceed FS<sub>POC</sub> flux, with the exception being during a spring bloom sampled in the Southern Ocean. In the Southern Ocean SS<sub>POC</sub> fluxes often increase with depth relative to FS<sub>POC</sub> flux, likely due to midwater fragmentation of FS<sub>POC</sub>, a process which may contribute to shallow mineralization of POC and hence to reduced carbon storage. Biogeochemical models do not generally reproduce this behavior, meaning that they likely overestimate long-term ocean carbon storage.