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Geological Society, London, Special Publications; 1987; v. 26; p. 121-135;
DOI: 10.1144/GSL.SP.1987.026.01.07
© 1987 Geological Society of London

Part II: Depositional and Environments

The carbon cycle—tracking the path of organic particles from sea to sediment

E. T. Degens & V. Ittekkot

Geological and Paleontological Institute and Museum, University of Hamburg, Bundesstrasse 55, D-2000 Hamburg 13, Federal Republic of Germany

Sedimentation of organic matter in the marine habitat represents a major link in the transfer of carbon from the hydrosphere to the geosphere. Evidence is presented that zooplankton and phytoplankton communities are actively involved in the fast removal of small-sized mineral and organic particles from the euphotic zone to the deep sea. For instance, copepods package detritus into faecal pellets which are jetted to the sea floor at velocities of about 500 m per day. Attention is also drawn to coccoliths. They excrete mucus which is instrumental in scavenging detritus and in forming macroflocs which rapidly sink. Time series sediment traps deployed in various shallow and deep-sea environments permit collection of such particles in mid-water. Variations in the distribution pattern of sugars, amino sugars, and amino acids indicate seasonality in the fluxes of ‘fresh’ materials. These data suggest that the bulk of small-sized particles presently suspended in surface waters of the open ocean is carried off by planktonic organisms to the sea floor. Prior to the advent of copepods or mucus-excreting nannoplankton in the stratigraphic record, the ancient sea must have looked different with respect to the content of suspended solids since settling velocities—according to Stoke’s law—are only a few centimetres a day for clay-sized particles. Even at later geological times, environmental events that lead to unbalanced plankton communities should have found their echo in the sediment facies.