The CARIACO Ocean Time-Series: two decades of oceanographic observations to understand linkages between biogeochemistry, ecology, and long-term environmental variability.

Laura Lorenzoni1, Frank E Muller-Karger1, Digna T Rueda-Roa1, Robert Thunell2, Mary I Scranton3, Gordon T Taylor4, Claudia R Benitez-Nelson5, Enrique Montes1, Yrene Margarita Astor6 and Jaimie Rojas6, (1)University of South Florida, College of Marine Science, St. Petersburg, FL, United States, (2)University of South Carolina Columbia, School of Earth, Ocean and Environment, Columbia, SC, United States, (3)Stony Brook University, School of Marine & Atmospheric Sciences, Stony Brook, NY, United States, (4)Stony Brook University, School of Marine and Atmospheric Sciences, Stony Brook, NY, United States, (5)University of South Carolina Columbia, Columbia, SC, United States, (6)Margarita Marine Research Station of Fundación La Salle de Ciencias Naturales, Porlamar, Venezuela
Abstract:
The CARIACO Ocean Time-Series project, located in the Cariaco Basin off the coast of Venezuela, seeks to understand relationships between hydrography, primary production, community composition, microbial activity, particle fluxes, and element cycling in the water column, and how variations in these processes are preserved in sediments accumulating in this anoxic basin. CARIACO uses autonomous and shipboard measurements to understand ecological and biogeochemical changes and how these relate to regional and global climatic/ocean variability. CARIACO is a model for national ocean observing programs in Central/South America, and has been developed as a community facility platform with open access to all data (http://imars.marine.usf.edu/cariaco). Research resulting from this program has contributed to knowledge about the decomposition and cycling of particles, the biological pump, and to our understanding of the ecology and oceanography of oxygen minimum zones. Despite this basin being anoxic below ~250m, remineralization rates of organic matter are comparable to those in well oxygenated waters. A dynamic microbial community significantly influences carbon and nutrient biogeochemical cycling throughout the water column. Since 1995, declining particulate organic carbon fluxes have been measured throughout the water column using sediment traps, likely in response to declining Chl-a concentrations and smaller phytoplankton which have replaced the larger taxa over the past decade. This community shift appears to be caused by regional changes in the physical regime. CARIACO also recorded marked long-term changes in surface and deep DIC in response to a combination of factors including surface water warming. The observations of CARIACO highlight the importance of a sustained, holistic approach to studying biodiversity, ecology and the marine carbon cycle to predict potential impacts of climate change on the ocean’s ecosystem services and carbon sequestration efficiency.