Data on the concentration of dissolved organic carbon and total organic carbon provide the environmental context for us to understand the role that extracellular vesicles play in marine organic carbon cycling. These data are from discrete seawater samples collected from Niskin bottles or from the underway systems during three cruises (AE2412, AE2426b, AE2427) conducted in 2024. All cruises were in the northwestern Atlantic Ocean. Seawater was whole seawater for total organic carbon or 0.2 uM-fil...
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Seawater was collected from Niskin bottles or the ship’s underway system. Samples were processed to obtain the concentrations of dissolved organic carbon and total organic carbon. The seawater for total organic carbon (TOC) was aliquoted directly into a combusted glass vial. For dissolved organic carbon (DOC), seawater was filtered with a 0.2 µM Omnipore filter (Whatman) mounted in a Teflon filter holder into a combusted glass vial. Both types of samples were acidified to pH~3 with concentrated hydrochloric acid (HCl) and stored at 4°C until analysis with a Shimadzu TOC-L. Blanks (MilliQ water) and standard curves with potassium hydrogen phthalate were interspersed into the sample runs. The coefficient of variability between replicate injections was <1%. Comparisons to standards provided by Prof. D. Hansell (University of Miami) were made daily.
Longnecker, K. (2025) Dissolved and total organic carbon concentrations from three cruises aboard the Atlantic Explorer (AE2412, AE2426b, AE2427) in the northwestern Atlantic Ocean during 2024. Biological and Chemical Oceanography Data Management Office (BCO-DMO). (Version 1) Version Date 2025-11-13 [if applicable, indicate subset used]. http://lod.bco-dmo.org/id/dataset/986721 [access date]
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