par Jung, Jonathan;Duprey, Nicolas;Foreman, Alan;D’Olivo, Juan Pablo;Pellio, Carolin;Ryu, Yeongjun;Murphy, Erin L.;Romshoo, Baseerat;Kersting, Diego;Cardoso, Gabriel O.;Wald, Tanja;Fripiat, François
;Jimenez, Carlos;Gischler, Eberhard;Montagna, Paolo;Alonso-Hernández, Carlos;Gomez-Batista, Miguel;Treinen-Crespo, Christina;Carriquiry, José;Ong, Maria Rosabelle;Goodkin, Nathalie;Guppy, Reia;Aardema, Hedy;Slagter, Hans;Heins, Lena;de Angelis, Isabella Hrabe;Bieler, Aaron L.;Yehudai, Maayan;Noël, Trevor P.;James, Kendon;Scholz, Denis;Hu, Chuanmin;Barnes, Brian B.;Pozzer, Andrea;Pöhlker, Christopher;Lelieveld, Jos;Pöschl, Ulrich;Vonhof, Hubert;Haug, Gerald H.;Schiebel, Ralf;Sigman, Daniel M.;Martínez-García, Alfredo
Référence Nature Geoscience
Publication Publié, 2025-11-01
;Jimenez, Carlos;Gischler, Eberhard;Montagna, Paolo;Alonso-Hernández, Carlos;Gomez-Batista, Miguel;Treinen-Crespo, Christina;Carriquiry, José;Ong, Maria Rosabelle;Goodkin, Nathalie;Guppy, Reia;Aardema, Hedy;Slagter, Hans;Heins, Lena;de Angelis, Isabella Hrabe;Bieler, Aaron L.;Yehudai, Maayan;Noël, Trevor P.;James, Kendon;Scholz, Denis;Hu, Chuanmin;Barnes, Brian B.;Pozzer, Andrea;Pöhlker, Christopher;Lelieveld, Jos;Pöschl, Ulrich;Vonhof, Hubert;Haug, Gerald H.;Schiebel, Ralf;Sigman, Daniel M.;Martínez-García, AlfredoRéférence Nature Geoscience
Publication Publié, 2025-11-01
Article révisé par les pairs
| Résumé : | Abstract The Great Atlantic Sargassum Belt first appeared in 2011 and quickly became the largest interconnected floating biome on Earth. In recent years, Sargassum stranding events have caused substantial ecological and socio-economic impacts in coastal communities. Sargassum requires both phosphorus (P) and nitrogen (N) for growth, yet the primary sources of these nutrients fuelling the extensive Sargassum blooms remain unclear. Here we use coral-bound N isotopes to reconstruct N 2 fixation, the ultimate source of the ocean’s bioavailable N, across the Caribbean over the past 120 years. Our data indicate that changes in N 2 fixation were primarily controlled by multidecadal and interannual changes in equatorial Atlantic upwelling of ‘excess P’, that is, P in stoichiometric excess relative to fixed N. We show that the supply of excess P from equatorial upwelling and N from the N 2 fixation response can account for the majority of Sargassum variability since 2011. Sargassum dynamics are best explained by their symbiosis with N 2 -fixing epiphytes, which render the macroalgae highly competitive during strong equatorial upwelling of excess P. Thus, the future of Sargassum in the tropical Atlantic will depend on how global warming affects equatorial Atlantic upwelling and the climatic modes that control it. |



