Carbon recycling at the seafloor: Understanding processes through pore-water dissolved organic matter-November 21st

Tomoko Komada, San Francisco State University

Moss Landing Marine Labs Seminar Series - November 21st, 2019

Hosted by the Chemical Oceanography Lab

MLML Seminar Room, 4pm

Open to the public

Tomoko Komada is a marine biogeochemist at the Estuary & Ocean Science Center, San Francisco State University. She is also a faculty member at the Department of Chemistry & Biochemistry, SFSU. Her research centers on the transformation of organic matter across the land-ocean interface, and in the application of natural carbon isotopes to deconvolve carbon cycle processes. She has a PhD in Chemical Oceanography from Rutgers University, and a BA in Chemistry from International Christian University, Tokyo.

Abstract:

Organic matter decomposition at the seafloor constitutes a critical fork in the road in the global carbon cycle, where carbon is either returned to seawater and the atmosphere through decomposition, or sequestered over geological time. However, mechanisms of organic matter degradation, and factors that control its rate remain unclear. This presentation will highlight main findings from an ongoing project that aims to fill this knowledge gap by examining the composition and dynamics of dissolved organic matter (DOM) in the interstitial pore waters of marine sediments. Pore-water DOM plays a central role in the carbon recycling process, because sedimentary organic matter must be first solubilized to DOM before it can be utilized by the microbial community. Findings to date underscore the high molecular diversity of pore-water DOM, and indicate that degradation itself enhances this diversity. Degradation rate differs sharply across DOM constituents, and this variation in part correlates with the age of the substrate. Implications of these findings on the marine carbon cycle will be discussed.