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Dive into the research topics where Patrick J. Frings is active.

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Featured researches published by Patrick J. Frings.


Global Biogeochemical Cycles | 2012

Global importance, patterns, and controls of dissolved silica retention in lakes and reservoirs

John A. Harrison; Patrick J. Frings; A. H. W. Beusen; Daniel J. Conley; Michelle L. McCrackin

Lentic water bodies (lakes and reservoirs) offer favorable conditions for silica (SiO2) burial in sediments. Recent global estimates suggest that (1) lentic SiO2 trapping is a globally important SiO2 flux, and (2) through reservoir construction, humans have dramatically altered river dissolved SiO2 (DSi) transport and coastal DSi delivery. However, regional to global scale patterns and controls of DSi removal in lentic systems are poorly constrained. Here we use 27 published lake and reservoir DSi budgets to develop insights into patterns and controls of lentic DSi retention and to develop a new, spatially explicit, global model of lentic DSi removal called SiRReLa (Silica Retention in Reservoirs and Lakes). In our analysis, lentic DSi removal (kg SiO2 yr(-1)) was significantly and positively related to DSi loading (P < 0.0001; r(2) = 0.98), and DSi removal efficiency was significantly and positively related to water residence time (P < 0.0001; r(2) = 0.68). In addition, DSi settling rates were, on average, 6.5-fold higher in eutrophic systems than in non-eutrophic systems (median settling velocities: 11.1 and 1.7 m yr(-1) for eutrophic and non-eutrophic systems, respectively; P < 0.01). SiRReLa, which incorporates these insights, performed quite well in predicting both total DSi removal (kg SiO2 yr(-1); Nash Sutcliffe Efficiency (N.S.E) = 0.88) and DSi removal efficiency (% Si removed; N.S.E. = 0.75), with no detectable bias in the model. Global application of SiRReLa confirms that lentic systems are important sinks for DSi, removing 89.1 Tg DSi yr(-1) from watersheds globally, roughly 19-38% of all DSi inputs to surface waters. Small lakes and reservoirs (<50 km(2)) were critical in the analysis, retaining 81% (72 Tg DSi yr(-1)) of the globally retained total. Furthermore, although reservoirs occupy just 6% of the global lentic surface area, they retained approximately 35% of the total DSi removed by lentic systems. Regional hot spots for lentic DSi removal were identified and imply that lentic systems can remove the vast majority of DSi across a large fraction of Earths land surface. Finally, a sensitivity analysis indicates that future improvements in DSi trapping and transport models should focus on improving estimates of DSi input to surface waters. (Less)


Frontiers of Earth Science in China | 2018

A review of the stable isotope bio-geochemistry of the global silicon cycle and its associated trace elements

Jill N. Sutton; Luc André; Damien Cardinal; Daniel J. Conley; Gregory F. de Souza; Jonathan R. Dean; Justin P. Dodd; Claudia Ehlert; Michael J. Ellwood; Patrick J. Frings; Patricia Grasse; Katharine R. Hendry; Melanie J. Leng; Panagiotis Michalopoulos; Virginia Panizzo; George E. A. Swann

Silicon (Si) is the second most abundant element in the Earth’s crust and is an important nutrient in the ocean. The global Si cycle plays a critical role in regulating primary productivity and carbon cycling on the continents and in the oceans. Development of the analytical tools used to study the sources, sinks, and fluxes of the global Si cycle (e.g., elemental and stable isotope ratio data for Ge, Si, Zn, etc.) have recently led to major advances in our understanding of the mechanisms and processes that constrain the cycling of Si in the modern environment and in the past. Here, we provide background on the geochemical tools that are available for studying the Si cycle and highlight our current understanding of the marine, freshwater and terrestrial systems. We place emphasis on the geochemistry (e.g., Al/Si, Ge/Si, Zn/Si, δ13 C, δ15 N, δ18 O, δ30 Si) of dissolved and biogenic Si, present case studies, such as the Silicic Acid Leakage Hypothesis, and discuss challenges associated with the development of these environmental proxies for the global Si cycle. We also discuss how each system within the global Si cycle might change over time (i.e., sources, sinks, and processes) and the potential technical and conceptual limitations that need to be considered for future studies.


Geobiology | 2015

Biogenicity of an Early Quaternary iron formation, Milos Island, Greece

E. Chi Fru; Magnus Ivarsson; Stephanos P. Kilias; Patrick J. Frings; Christoffer Hemmingsson; Curt Broman; Stefan Bengtson; E. Chatzitheodoridis

A ~2.0-million-year-old shallow-submarine sedimentary deposit on Milos Island, Greece, harbours an unmetamorphosed fossiliferous iron formation (IF) comparable to Precambrian banded iron formations (BIFs). This Milos IF holds the potential to provide clues to the origin of Precambrian BIFs, relative to biotic and abiotic processes. Here, we combine field stratigraphic observations, stable isotopes of C, S and Si, rock petrography and microfossil evidence from a ~5-m-thick outcrop to track potential biogeochemical processes that may have contributed to the formation of the BIF-type rocks and the abrupt transition to an overlying conglomerate-hosted IF (CIF). Bulk δ(13) C isotopic compositions lower than -25‰ provide evidence for biological contribution by the Calvin and reductive acetyl-CoA carbon fixation cycles to the origin of both the BIF-type and CIF strata. Low S levels of ~0.04 wt.% combined with δ(34) S estimates of up to ~18‰ point to a non-sulphidic depository. Positive δ(30) Si records of up to +0.53‰ in the finely laminated BIF-type rocks indicate chemical deposition on the seafloor during weak periods of arc magmatism. Negative δ(30) Si data are consistent with geological observations suggesting a sudden change to intense arc volcanism potentially terminated the deposition of the BIF-type layer. The typical Precambrian rhythmic rocks of alternating Fe- and Si-rich bands are associated with abundant and spatially distinct microbial fossil assemblages. Together with previously proposed anoxygenic photoferrotrophic iron cycling and low sedimentary N and C potentially connected to diagenetic denitrification, the Milos IF is a biogenic submarine volcano-sedimentary IF showing depositional conditions analogous to Archaean Algoma-type BIFs.


Frontiers in Marine Science | 2017

Biosilicification drives a decline of dissolved si in the oceans through geologic time

Daniel J. Conley; Patrick J. Frings; Guillaume Fontorbe; Wim Clymans; Johanna Stadmark; Katharine R. Hendry; Alan O. Marron; Christina De La Rocha

Biosilicification has driven variation in the global Si cycle over geologic time. The evolution of different eukaryotic lineages that convert dissolved Si (DSi) into mineralized structures (higher plants, siliceous sponges, radiolarians, and diatoms) has driven a secular decrease in DSi in the global ocean leading to the low DSi concentrations seen today. Recent studies, however, have questioned the timing previously proposed for the DSi decreases and the concentration changes through deep time, which would have major implications for the cycling of carbon and other key nutrients in the ocean. Here, we combine relevant genomic data with geological data and present new hypotheses regarding the impact of the evolution of biosilicifying organisms on the DSi inventory of the oceans throughout deep time. Although there is no fossil evidence for true silica biomineralization until the late Precambrian, the timing of the evolution of silica transporter genes suggests that bacterial silicon-related metabolism has been present in the oceans since the Archean with eukaryotic silicon metabolism already occurring in the Neoproterozoic. We hypothesize that biological processes have influenced oceanic DSi concentrations since the beginning of oxygenic photosynthesis. (Less)


Frontiers in Marine Science | 2017

Assessing the potential of sponges (Porifera) as indicators of ocean dissolved Si concentrations

Belinda Alvarez; Patrick J. Frings; Wim Clymans; Guillaume Fontorbe; Daniel J. Conley

We explore the distribution of sponges along dissolved silica (dSi) concentration gradients to test whether sponge assemblages are related to dSi and to assess the validity of fossil sponges as a palaeoecological tool for inferring dSi concentrations of the past oceans. We extracted sponge records from the publically available Global Biodiversity Information Facility (GBIF) database and linked these records with ocean physiochemical data to evaluate if there is any correspondence between dSi concentrations of the waters sponges inhabit and their distribution. Over 320,000 records of Porifera were available, of which 62,360 met strict quality control criteria. Our analyses was limited to the taxonomic levels of family, order and class. Because dSi concentration is correlated with depth in the modern ocean, we also explored sponge taxa distributions as a function of depth. We observe that while some sponge taxa appear to have dSi preferences (e.g., class Hexactinellida occurs mostly at high dSi), the overall distribution of sponge orders and families along dSi gradients is not sufficiently differentiated to unambiguously relate dSi concentrations to sponge taxa assemblages. We also observe that sponge taxa tend to be similarly distributed along a depth gradient. In other words, both dSi and/or another variable that depth is a surrogate for, may play a role in controlling sponge spatial distribution and the challenge is to distinguish between the two. We conclude that inferences about palaeo-dSi concentrations drawn from the abundance of sponges in the stratigraphic records must be treated cautiously as these animals are adapted to a great range of dSi conditions and likely other underlying variables that are related to depth. Our analysis provides a quantification of the dSi ranges of common sponge taxa, expands on previous knowledge related to their bathymetry preferences and suggest that sponge taxa assemblages are not related to particular dSi conditions. (Less)


Aquatic Sciences | 2017

The trapping of organic matter within plant patches in the channels of the Okavango Delta : a matter of quality

Jonas Schoelynck; Jörg Schaller; Mike Murray-Hudson; Patrick J. Frings; Daniel J. Conley; Dimitri van Pelt; Keotshephile Mosimane; Mangaliso J. Gondwe; Piotr Wolski; Patrick Meire; Eric Struyf

The role of in-stream aquatic vegetation as ecosystem engineers in the distribution of organic matter was investigated in the Okavango Delta, one of the world’s largest oligotrophic wetlands. The Okavango channel beds are covered up to 50% with submerged macrophyte patches. By accumulating and concentrating organic matter in the sediments below the patches, macrophytes are likely able to locally forestall a deficiency of nutrients. Up to 21 times more N, 18 times more C, 13 times more P and 6 times more Si can be found in vegetated sediments compared to non-vegetated sediments. Nutrient specific accumulation relates to its relative scarcity in the overlaying water. There is a depletion of dissolved N relative to P, whereas Si is relatively abundant. The Okavango Delta water can generally be characterised as oligotrophic based on plant species composition (e.g. presence of carnivorous plants and absence of floating plants), low plant N:P ratios, and low nutrient- and element-concentrations. Local mineralization and intensified nutrient cycling in the sediments is hypothesized to be crucial for the macrophytes’ survival because it provides a key source of the essential nutrients which plants otherwise cannot obtain in sufficient quantities from the nutrient poor water. By engineering the ecosystem as such, channel vegetation also retards the loss of elements and nutrients to island groundwater flow, contributing to one of the key processes driving the high productivity of the Okavango Delta, making it unique among its kind.


Chemical Geology | 2016

The continental Si cycle and its impact on the ocean Si isotope budget

Patrick J. Frings; Wim Clymans; Guillaume Fontorbe; Christina De La Rocha; Daniel J. Conley


Biogeochemistry | 2014

Lack of steady-state in the global biogeochemical Si cycle: emerging evidence from lake Si sequestration

Patrick J. Frings; Wim Clymans; Erik Jeppesen; Torben L. Lauridsen; Eric Struyf; Daniel J. Conley


Limnology and Oceanography-methods | 2015

Alkaline‐extractable silicon from land to ocean: A challenge for biogenic silicon determination

Lúcia Barão; Floor Vandevenne; Wim Clymans; Patrick J. Frings; Olivier Ragueneau; Patrick Meire; Daniel J. Conley; Eric Struyf


Earth and Planetary Science Letters | 2016

A silicon depleted North Atlantic since the Palaeogene: Evidence from sponge and radiolarian silicon isotopes

Guillaume Fontorbe; Patrick J. Frings; Christina De La Rocha; Katharine R. Hendry; Daniel J. Conley

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Piotr Wolski

University of Cape Town

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