- Sediment trap
Sediment traps are instruments used in
oceanography to measure the quantity of sinking particulate organic (andinorganic ) material in aquatic systems, usuallyocean s. This flux of material is the product of biological and ecological processes typically within the surface euphotic zone, and is of interest toscientist s studying the role of thebiological pump in thecarbon cycle cite journal | last=Raven | first=J.A. | coauthors=and Falkowski, P.G. | year=1999 | title=Oceanic sinks for atmospheric CO2 | url=http://www.blackwell-synergy.com/doi/abs/10.1046/j.1365-3040.1999.00419.x | journal=Plant, Cell and Environment | issn=0140-7791 | volume=22 | issue=6 | pages=741–755 | doi=10.1046/j.1365-3040.1999.00419.x] .Sediments traps normally consist of an upward-facing
funnel that directs sinkingmarine snow towards a mechanism for collection and preservation. Typically, traps operate over an extended period of time (weeks to months) and their collection mechanisms may consist of a series of sampling vessels that are cycled through to allow the trap to record the changes in sinking flux with time (for instance, across a seasonal cycle). Preservation of collected material is necessary because of these long deployments, and prevents sampledecomposition and its consumption byzooplankton "swimmers"cite journal | last=Buesseler | first=K.O. | coauthors="et al." | year=2007 | title=An assessment of the use of sediment traps for estimating upper ocean particle fluxes | journal=J. Mar. Res. | issn=0022-2402 | volume=65 | pages=345-416 | url=http://www.ingentaconnect.com/content/jmr/jmr/2007/00000065/00000003/art00002] .Traps are often moored at a specific depth in the water column (usually below the euphotic zone or
mixed layer ) in a particular location, but some are so-calledLagrangian traps that drift with the surroundingocean current s (though they may remain at a fixed depth). These latter traps travel with the biological systems that they study, while moored traps are subject to variability introduced by different systems (or states of systems) "passing by". However, because of their fixed location moored traps are straightforward to recover for analysis of their measurements. Lagrangian traps must surface at a pre-determined time, and report their position (usually viasatellite ) in order to be recovered.References
ee also
*
Biological pump
*f-ratio
*Marine snow
*Mooring (oceanography)
*Primary production
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