RT Journal Article SR Electronic T1 Microbial metabolite fluxes in a model marine anoxic ecosystem JF bioRxiv FD Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory SP 625087 DO 10.1101/625087 A1 Stilianos Louca A1 Yrene M. Astor A1 Michael Doebeli A1 Gordon T. Taylor A1 Mary I. Scranton YR 2019 UL http://biorxiv.org/content/early/2019/05/02/625087.abstract AB Permanently anoxic regions in the ocean are widespread, and exhibit unique microbial metabolic activity exerting substantial influence on global elemental cycles and climate. Reconstructing microbial metabolic activity rates in these regions has been challenging, due to the technical difficulty of direct rate measurements. In Cariaco Basin, which is the largest permanently anoxic marine basin and an important model system for geobiology, long-term monitoring has yielded time series for the concentrations of biologically important compounds; however the underlying metabolite fluxes remain poorly quantified. Here we present a computational approach for reconstructing vertical fluxes and in situ net production/consumption rates from chemical concentration data, based on a 1-dimensional time-dependent diffusive transport model that includes adaptive penalization of overfitting. We use this approach to estimate spatiotemporally resolved fluxes of oxygen, nitrate, hydrogen sulfide, ammonium, methane and phosphate within the sub-euphotic Cariaco Basin water column (depths 150–900 m, years 2001–2014), and to identify hotspots of microbial chemolithotrophic activity. Predictions of the fitted models are in excellent agreement with the data, and substantially expand our knowledge of the geobiology in Cariaco Basin. In particular, we find that the diffusivity, and consequently fluxes of major reductants such as hydrogen sulfide and methane, are about two orders of magnitude greater than previously estimated, thus resolving a long standing apparent conundrum between electron donor fluxes and measured dark carbon assimilation rates.ILTMinverse linear transport modelingDCAdark carbon assimilation