Dataset: Bulk and CSIA-AA stable isotopes in sinking POM and proteinaceous deep-sea coral skeletal material
View Data: Data not available yet
Data Citation:
Guilderson, T. (2023) Bulk and CSIA-AA stable isotopes in sinking POM (sediment trap collected) and proteinaceous deep-sea coral skeletal material in Monterey Bay from 1998 to 2007. Biological and Chemical Oceanography Data Management Office (BCO-DMO). (Version 1) Version Date 2023-03-07 [if applicable, indicate subset used]. http://lod.bco-dmo.org/id/dataset/891113 [access date]
Terms of Use
This dataset is licensed under Creative Commons Attribution 4.0.
If you wish to use this dataset, it is highly recommended that you contact the original principal investigators (PI). Should the relevant PI be unavailable, please contact BCO-DMO (info@bco-dmo.org) for additional guidance. For general guidance please see the BCO-DMO Terms of Use document.
Spatial Extent: N:36.747 E:-122.022 S:36.697 W:-122.378
Temporal Extent: 1998 - 2007
Project:
Principal Investigator:
Thomas Guilderson (University of California-Santa Cruz, UCSC)
BCO-DMO Data Manager:
Amber D. York (Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution, WHOI BCO-DMO)
Version:
1
Version Date:
2023-03-07
Restricted:
No
Validated:
No
Current State:
Data not available
Bulk and CSIA-AA stable isotopes in sinking POM (sediment trap collected) and proteinaceous deep-sea coral skeletal material in Monterey Bay from 1998 to 2007
Abstract:
Recent work using compound-specific stable isotopes of amino acids (CSI-AA) in proteinaceous deep-sea corals opens a new realm of high‑fidelity reconstructions of biogeochemical and ecological changes in the ocean. However, underlying these CSI-AA paleoceanographic applications are a series of fundamental assumptions, which hold first that baseline-proxy AA isotope values fixed at the base of food webs represent integrated d13C and d15N values of primary production, and second they stay unaltered during subsequent export and incorporation from particles into corals. We explored long-term d13C and d15N CSI-AA data on a sediment trap time series together with contemporaneous deep-sea bamboo corals (Isidella sp.) in the California margin, to for the first time directly test these assumptions. Isotope values of essential (d13CEAA) and source AAs (d15NPhe) in sinking particles quantitatively tracked bulk d13C and d15N values of export production. These CSI-AA baseline proxies varied independently of carbon flux, trophic position (TPCSI-AA) and microbial alteration, suggesting that they were well preserved in sinking particles. Paired comparisons between sinking particles and deep-sea corals revealed minor elevations of d13CEAA (by ~2‰) and d15NPhe (by ~1‰) in the coral skeletons. We hypothesize the difference in d13CEAA is due to the geographic offset in d13C values of primary production expected between the (more offshore) sediment trap site and (more onshore) coral specimens, whereas the d15NPhe offset is likely related to expected minor trophic fractionation. Using empirical models derived from the sediment trap time series, we demonstrate that CSI-AA in proteinaceous deep-sea corals reconstructs bulk d15N values of export production, source nitrogen δ15N values, and exported TPCSI-AA values with very good fidelity. Together, these findings represent a major advance in our understanding of AA isotope behaviors in modern and paleoarchives, and will underpin the rapidly evolving use of CSI‑AA‑based tools in paleoceanographic studies.
These data were published in an alternate format as part of the supplementary materials pdf of Shen et al. (2021).