A new perspective on environmental controls of marine nitrogen fixation
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Abstract
Abstract Growing slowly, marine N 2 fixers are generally expected to be competitive only where nitrogen (N) supply is low relative to that of phosphorus (P) with respect to the cellular N:P ratio ( R ) of nonfixing phytoplankton. This is at odds with observed high N 2 fixation rates in the oligotrophic North Atlantic where the ratio of nutrients supplied to the surface is elevated in N relative to the average R (16:1). In this study, we investigate several mechanisms to solve this puzzle: iron limitation, phosphorus enhancement by preferential remineralization or stoichiometric diversity of phytoplankton, and dissolved organic phosphorus (DOP) utilization. Combining resource competition theory and a global coupled ecosystem‐circulation model, we find that the additional N and energy investments required for exoenzymatic breakdown of DOP give N 2 fixers a competitive advantage in oligotrophic P‐starved regions. Accounting for this mechanism expands the ecological niche of N 2 fixers also to regions where the nutrient supply is high in N relative to R , yielding, in our model, a pattern consistent with the observed high N 2 fixation rates in the oligotrophic North Atlantic.
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