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2000 | OriginalPaper | Chapter

Fluxes of Major Biochemicals in the Equatorial Pacific Ocean

Authors : Stuart G. Wakeham, Cindy Lee, John I. Hedges

Published in: Dynamics and Characterization of Marine Organic Matter

Publisher: Springer Netherlands

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A coordinated study of the geochemistry of major biochemical classes has been carried out in the equatorial Pacific Ocean (EqPac) as part of the U.S. Global Ocean Flux Study (JGOFS). Amino acids, carbohydrates, pigments, and lipids were measured at the molecular level in plankton, sediment trap material, and sediments along a transect from 12°N to 12°S along 140°W to address questions related to the efficiency and dynamics of the carbon pump in the equatorial Pacific and how processes in the water column affect the burial of biogenic components. Here we present an overview of our findings, discussing fluxes and relative reactivities of the biochemical classes. We conclude with an inventory of the major particulate biochemicals in the equatorial Pacific, in which the proportion of organic carbon amenable to conventional molecular-level analyses decreases from ~82% in plankton to ~20% in sediments, demonstrating the need for new analytical approaches to characterize residual macromolecular material.

Metadata
Title
Fluxes of Major Biochemicals in the Equatorial Pacific Ocean
Authors
Stuart G. Wakeham
Cindy Lee
John I. Hedges
Copyright Year
2000
Publisher
Springer Netherlands
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/978-94-017-1319-1_6