Geographical patterns and drivers of dissolved organic matter in the global ocean

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Abstract

Dissolved organic matter (DOM) comprises a diverse mixture of organic molecules, playing a critical role in marine biogeochemistry and Earth’s climate. However, the ecological patterns and drivers of DOM composition at the global scale, and their variation across compound classes, remain unclear. Here we quantify the compositional turnover of DOM samples covering the surface waters to the deep across the global ocean using an ultrahigh-resolution mass spectrometry dataset. Molecular compositions become increasingly dissimilar with greater geographical distances in both horizontal and vertical dimensions. The observed turnover rates, consistent across biochemically labile and recalcitrant compound classes, progressively decrease towards the deep ocean and high latitudes, indicating a trend of chemohomogenization. The geographical distribution is jointly influenced by horizontal spatial distance, water depth, and physicochemical environments. This study unravels geographical patterns of DOM compositional in the global ocean from ecological perspective, deepening understanding of the forthcoming biogeochemical changes under global warming.

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