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Natural and anthropogenic sources of bromoform and dibromomethane in the oceanographic and biogeochemical regime of the subtropical North East Atlantic
Author(s) -
Melina Mehlmann,
Birgit Quack,
E. Atlas,
Helmke Hepach,
Susann Tegtmeier
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
environmental science processes and impacts
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.128
H-Index - 98
eISSN - 2050-7895
pISSN - 2050-7887
DOI - 10.1039/c9em00599d
Subject(s) - biogeochemical cycle , bromoform , oceanography , subtropics , environmental science , natural (archaeology) , environmental chemistry , geology , chemistry , fishery , biology , chromatography , chloroform , paleontology
The organic bromine compounds bromoform (CHBr 3 ) and dibromomethane (CH 2 Br 2 ) influence tropospheric chemistry and stratospheric ozone depletion. Their atmospheric abundance is generally related to a common marine source, which is not well characterized. A cruise between the three Macaroenesian Archipelagos of Cape Verde, the Canaries and Madeira revealed that anthropogenic sources increased oceanic CHBr 3 emissions significantly close to some islands, especially at the Canaries, while heterotrophic processes in the ocean increased the flux of CH 2 Br 2 from the sea to the atmosphere in the Cape Verde region. As anthropogenic disinfection processes, which release CHBr 3 in coastal areas increase, and as more CH 2 Br 2 may be produced from increased heterotrophy in a warming, deoxygenated ocean, both sources could supply higher fractions of stratospheric bromine in the future, with yet unknown consequences for stratospheric ozone.

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