Nielja S. Knecht

and 8 more

Shelled pteropods and planktic foraminifers are calcifying zooplankton that contribute to the biological carbon pump, but their importance for regional and global plankton biomass and carbon fluxes is not well understood. Here, we modelled global annual patterns of pteropod and foraminifer total carbon (TC) biomass and total inorganic carbon (TIC) export fluxes over the top 200m using an ensemble of five species distribution models (SDMs). An exhaustive newly assembled dataset of zooplankton abundance observations was used to estimate the biomass of both plankton groups. With the SDM ensemble we modeled global TC biomass depending on multiple environmental parameters. We found hotspots of mean annual pteropod biomass in the high Northern latitudes and the global upwelling systems, and in the high latitudes of both hemispheres and the tropics for foraminifers. This largely agrees with previously observed distributions. For the biomass of both groups, surface temperature is the strongest environmental correlate, followed by chlorophyll-a. We found mean annual standing stocks of 52 (48-57) Tg TC and 0.9 (0.6-1.1) Tg TC for pteropods and foraminifers, respectively. This translates to mean annual TIC fluxes of 14 (9-22) Tg TIC yr-1 for pteropod shells and 11 (3-27) Tg TIC yr-1 for foraminifer tests. These results are similar to previous estimates for foraminifers standing stocks and fluxes but approximately a factor of ten lower for pteropods. The two zooplankton calcifiers contribute approximately 1.5% each to global surface carbonate fluxes, leaving 40%-60% of the global carbonate fluxes unaccounted for. We make suggestions how to close this gap.

Sonia Chaabane

and 11 more

Planktonic Foraminifera (PF) shells are ubiquitous archives used as proxies in paleoceanography, and play a crucial role in paleoclimate reconstruction. Planktonic Foraminifera species are sensitive to both abiotic and biotic environmental parameters, and have experienced habitat shifts in response to ocean warming since the post-industrial era. In comparison to the seminal works from the 1950s to the 1970s, we reevaluate the ecological niche of planktonic Foraminifera in the modern ocean. Here, we present the most comprehensive update of their modern global ecological niches, vertical habitat distribution and thermal tolerance using the FORCIS database, which includes all available water-column sourced data over the last century. Our analysis of modern planktonic Foraminifera global distribution patterns, over the 1970-2018 interval, reveals the highest diversity in the tropical and subtropical oceans. Planktonic Foraminifera have consistently maintained a depth preference within the upper 100 m of the ocean, likely due to dependence on light and food availability. Spanning temperatures from-2°C to more than 32°C highlights the remarkable thermal tolerance and/or adaptability of PF to a wide range of temperatures. In addition, species that were once restricted to lower latitudes in the early post-industrial era (pre-1970) have been observed at higher latitudes over the past 50 years. Since the 1970s, small to medium-sized species have increased in abundance across all latitudes, from tropical to polar oceans, a trend particularly evident in the extensive data from the eastern North Atlantic. The analyses of the FORCIS database updates the evolving biogeography of modern PF, and advances our understanding of their ecology, providing revised benchmarks for paleoceanographic interpretations and the ecology of modern planktonic calcifiers.