1. Caribbean octocorals record changing carbon and nitrogen sources from 1862 to 2005.
- Author
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BAKER, DAVID M., WEBSTER, KIRBY L., and KIM, KIHO
- Subjects
OCTOCORALLIA ,BIOGEOCHEMICAL cycles ,CARBON & the environment ,NITROGEN & the environment ,STABLE isotopes ,FERTILIZERS & the environment ,MARINE ecology ,BIOTIC communities - Abstract
During the last century, the global biogeochemical cycles of carbon (C) and nitrogen (N) have been drastically altered by human activities. A century of land-clearing and biomass burning, followed by fossil fuel combustion have increased the concentration of atmospheric CO
2 by approximately 20%, and since the mid-1900s, the use of agricultural fertilizers has been the primary driver of an approximate 90% increase in bioavailable N. Geochemical records obtained through stable isotope analysis of terrestrial and marine biota effectively illustrate rising anthropogenic C inputs. However, there are fewer records of anthropogenic N, despite the enormous magnitude of change and the known negative effects of N on ecosystem health. We used stable isotope values from independent octocorals (gorgonians) sampled across the Western Atlantic over the last 143 years to document human perturbations of the marine C and N pools. Here, we demonstrate that in sea plumes δ13 C values and in both sea plumes and sea fans δ15 N values declined significantly from 1862 to 2005. Sea plume δ13 C values were negatively correlated with increasing atmospheric CO2 concentrations and corroborate known rates of change resulting from global fossil fuel combustion, known as the Suess effect. We suggest that widespread input of agricultural fertilizers to near-shore coastal waters is the dominant driver for the decreasing δ15 N trend, though multiple anthropogenic sources are likely affecting this trend. Given the interest in using δ15 N as an indicator for N pollution in aquatic systems, we highlight the risk of underestimating contributions of pollutants as a result of source mixing as demonstrated by a simple isotope-mixing model. We conclude that signals of major human-induced perturbations of the C and N pools are detectable in specimens collected over wide geographic scales, and that archived materials are invaluable for establishing baselines against which we can assess environmental change. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2010
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