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      Biogeography of bacteriophages at four hydrothermal vent sites in the Antarctic based on g23 sequence diversity

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      FEMS Microbiology Letters
      Oxford University Press (OUP)

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          Viral mortality of marine bacteria and cyanobacteria

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            Submarine hydrothermal vents and associated gradient environments as sites for the origin and evolution of life

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              Basin-scale transport of hydrothermal dissolved metals across the South Pacific Ocean.

              Hydrothermal venting along mid-ocean ridges exerts an important control on the chemical composition of sea water by serving as a major source or sink for a number of trace elements in the ocean. Of these, iron has received considerable attention because of its role as an essential and often limiting nutrient for primary production in regions of the ocean that are of critical importance for the global carbon cycle. It has been thought that most of the dissolved iron discharged by hydrothermal vents is lost from solution close to ridge-axis sources and is thus of limited importance for ocean biogeochemistry. This long-standing view is challenged by recent studies which suggest that stabilization of hydrothermal dissolved iron may facilitate its long-range oceanic transport. Such transport has been subsequently inferred from spatially limited oceanographic observations. Here we report data from the US GEOTRACES Eastern Pacific Zonal Transect (EPZT) that demonstrate lateral transport of hydrothermal dissolved iron, manganese, and aluminium from the southern East Pacific Rise (SEPR) several thousand kilometres westward across the South Pacific Ocean. Dissolved iron exhibits nearly conservative (that is, no loss from solution during transport and mixing) behaviour in this hydrothermal plume, implying a greater longevity in the deep ocean than previously assumed. Based on our observations, we estimate a global hydrothermal dissolved iron input of three to four gigamoles per year to the ocean interior, which is more than fourfold higher than previous estimates. Complementary simulations with a global-scale ocean biogeochemical model suggest that the observed transport of hydrothermal dissolved iron requires some means of physicochemical stabilization and indicate that hydrothermally derived iron sustains a large fraction of Southern Ocean export production.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                FEMS Microbiology Letters
                FEMS Microbiology Letters
                Oxford University Press (OUP)
                1574-6968
                March 11 2016
                April 2016
                April 2016
                February 22 2016
                : 363
                : 7
                : fnw043
                Article
                10.1093/femsle/fnw043
                ce214dd9-ed46-48b1-ad62-0912bb975b73
                © 2016
                History

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