TY - JOUR
T1 - Redox-Controlled Ammonium Storage and Overturn in Ediacaran Oceans
AU - Hallmann, Christian
AU - Grosjean, Emmanuelle
AU - Shapiro, Nathan D.
AU - Kashiyama, Yuichiro
AU - Chikaraishi, Yoshito
AU - Fike, David A.
AU - Ohkouchi, Naohiko
AU - Summons, Roger E.
N1 - Funding Information:
Samples for this study were provided by Shell International E & P. Petroleum Development Oman provided financial support for the early stages of this work. Additional MIT research was supported by the NASA Astrobiology Institute NNA13AA90A Foundations of Complex Life. CH thanks the Agouron Institute for support. NO was financially supported by grants from JSPS. Petroleum Development Oman and the Oman Ministry of Oil and Gas are thanked for the permission to publish.
Funding Information:
Samples for this study were provided by Shell International E & P. Petroleum Development Oman provided financial support for the early stages of this work. Additional MIT research was
Publisher Copyright:
© Copyright © 2021 Hallmann, Grosjean, Shapiro, Kashiyama, Chikaraishi, Fike, Ohkouchi and Summons.
PY - 2021/9/10
Y1 - 2021/9/10
N2 - As a key nutrient, nitrogen can limit primary productivity and carbon cycle dynamics, but also evolutionary progress. Given strong redox-dependency of its molecular speciation, environmental conditions can control nitrogen localization and bioavailability. This particularly applies to periods in Earth history with strong and frequent redox fluctuations, such as the Neoproterozoic. We here report on chlorophyll-derived porphyrins and maleimides in Ediacaran sediments from Oman. Exceptionally light δ15N values (< –10‰) in maleimides derived from anoxygenic phototrophs point towards ammonium assimilation at the chemocline, whereas the isotopic offset between kerogens and chlorophyll-derivatives indicates a variable regime of cyanobacterial and eukaryotic primary production in surface waters. Biomarker and maleimide mass balance considerations imply shallow euxinia during the terminal Ediacaran and a stronger contribution of anoxygenic phototrophs to primary productivity, possibly as a consequence of nutrient ‘lockup’ in a large anoxic ammonium reservoir. Synchronous δ13C and δ15N anomalies at the Ediacaran–Cambrian boundary may reflect one in a series of overturn events, mixing ammonium and isotopically-light DIC into oxic surface waters. By modulating access to nitrogen, environmental redox conditions may have periodically affected Ediacaran primary productivity, carbon cycle perturbations, and possibly played a role in the timing of the metazoan radiation across the terminal Ediacaran and early Cambrian.
AB - As a key nutrient, nitrogen can limit primary productivity and carbon cycle dynamics, but also evolutionary progress. Given strong redox-dependency of its molecular speciation, environmental conditions can control nitrogen localization and bioavailability. This particularly applies to periods in Earth history with strong and frequent redox fluctuations, such as the Neoproterozoic. We here report on chlorophyll-derived porphyrins and maleimides in Ediacaran sediments from Oman. Exceptionally light δ15N values (< –10‰) in maleimides derived from anoxygenic phototrophs point towards ammonium assimilation at the chemocline, whereas the isotopic offset between kerogens and chlorophyll-derivatives indicates a variable regime of cyanobacterial and eukaryotic primary production in surface waters. Biomarker and maleimide mass balance considerations imply shallow euxinia during the terminal Ediacaran and a stronger contribution of anoxygenic phototrophs to primary productivity, possibly as a consequence of nutrient ‘lockup’ in a large anoxic ammonium reservoir. Synchronous δ13C and δ15N anomalies at the Ediacaran–Cambrian boundary may reflect one in a series of overturn events, mixing ammonium and isotopically-light DIC into oxic surface waters. By modulating access to nitrogen, environmental redox conditions may have periodically affected Ediacaran primary productivity, carbon cycle perturbations, and possibly played a role in the timing of the metazoan radiation across the terminal Ediacaran and early Cambrian.
KW - ammonium
KW - animal evolution
KW - ediacaran
KW - nitrogen
KW - nutrient
KW - porphyrin
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85116295883&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.3389/feart.2021.706144
DO - 10.3389/feart.2021.706144
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85116295883
SN - 2296-6463
VL - 9
JO - Frontiers in Earth Science
JF - Frontiers in Earth Science
M1 - 706144
ER -