Nitrogen cycling in the Middle Atlantic Bight: Results from a three‐dimensional model and implications for the North Atlantic nitrogen budget
Top Cited Papers
- 19 July 2006
- journal article
- Published by American Geophysical Union (AGU) in Global Biogeochemical Cycles
- Vol. 20 (3)
- https://doi.org/10.1029/2005gb002456
Abstract
The biogeochemistry of continental shelf systems plays an important role in the global elemental cycling of nitrogen and carbon, but remains poorly quantified. We have developed a high‐resolution physical‐biological model for the U.S. east coast continental shelf and adjacent deep ocean that is nested within a basin‐wide North Atlantic circulation model in order to estimate nitrogen fluxes in the shelf area of the Middle Atlantic Bight (MAB). Our biological model is a relatively simple representation of nitrogen cycling processes in the water column and organic matter remineralization at the water‐sediment interface that explicitly accounts for sediment denitrification. Climatological and regionally integrated means of nitrate, ammonium, and surface chlorophyll are compared with its model equivalents and were found to agree within 1 standard deviation. We also present regional means of primary production and denitrification, and statistical measures of chlorophyll pattern variability. A nitrogen budget for the MAB shows that the sediment denitrification flux is quantitatively important in determining the availability of fixed nitrogen and shelf primary production (it was found to remove 90% of all the nitrogen entering the MAB). Extrapolation of nitrogen fluxes estimated for the MAB to the North Atlantic basin suggests that shelf denitrification removes 2.3 × 1012 mol N annually; this estimate exceeds estimates of N2 fixation by up to an order of magnitude. Our results emphasize the importance of representing shelf processes in biogeochemical models.Keywords
This publication has 70 references indexed in Scilit:
- Nitrogen fixation by Trichodesmium spp.: An important source of new nitrogen to the tropical and subtropical North Atlantic OceanGlobal Biogeochemical Cycles, 2005
- Daily and seasonal variations of the partial pressure of CO2 in surface seawater along Belgian and southern Dutch coastal areasJournal of Marine Systems, 1999
- Tidal mixing and cross-frontal particle exchange over a finite amplitude asymmetric bank: A model study with application to Georges BankJournal of Marine Research, 1998
- Photosynthetic rates derived from satellite‐based chlorophyll concentrationLimnology and Oceanography, 1997
- Oceanic primary production: 2. Estimation at global scale from satellite (Coastal Zone Color Scanner) chlorophyllGlobal Biogeochemical Cycles, 1996
- The shelf edge exchange processes experiment, SEEP-II: an introduction to hypotheses, results and conclusionsDeep Sea Research Part II: Topical Studies in Oceanography, 1994
- On the Origin of Shelf Water in the Middle Atlantic BightJournal of Physical Oceanography, 1989
- Modelling of a planktonic ecosystem in an enclosed water columnJournal of the Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom, 1987
- Numerical Treatment of Cross-Shelf Open Boundaries in a Barotropic Coastal Ocean ModelJournal of Physical Oceanography, 1985
- A Comparison of Georges Bank, Gulf of Maine and New England Shelf Tidal DynamicsJournal of Physical Oceanography, 1984