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Fluxes of particulate iron from the upper ocean around the Crozet Islands: A naturally iron‐fertilized environment in the Southern Ocean
Author(s) -
Planquette Hélène,
Sanders Richard R.,
Statham Peter J.,
Morris Paul J.,
Fones Gary R.
Publication year - 2011
Publication title -
global biogeochemical cycles
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.512
H-Index - 187
eISSN - 1944-9224
pISSN - 0886-6236
DOI - 10.1029/2010gb003789
Subject(s) - particulates , iron fertilization , oceanography , mixed layer , aeolian processes , phytoplankton , atmosphere (unit) , environmental chemistry , environmental science , chlorophyll a , aerosol , nutrient , geology , chemistry , geography , biochemistry , organic chemistry , geomorphology , meteorology
Despite a large macronutrient reservoir, the Southern Ocean has low levels of chlorophyll, primarily due to low iron availability. Exceptions to this situation are island systems where natural terrestrial iron inputs allow the development of large blooms. Particulate organic carbon (POC) and particulate (labile and refractory) iron analyses were performed on large (>53 μ m) particles collected at the base of the mixed layer within such a system (the Crozet Islands) and in adjacent high‐nutrient, low‐chlorophyll (HNLC) waters. Biogenic iron was obtained by removal of estimated lithogenic Fe from the total Fe present. We combine these data with 234 Th measurements to determine downward particulate Fe fluxes. Fluxes of Fe ranged from 4 to 301 nmol m −2 d −1 (labile), not detectable to 50 μ mol m −2 d −1 (biogenic), and from 3 to 145 μ mol m −2 d −1 (total) and, on average, were approximately four times larger below the highly productive, naturally iron‐fertilized region than below the adjacent HNLC area. Downward labile iron fluxes are close to the sum of dissolved terrestrial, atmospheric, and upwelled iron calculated from the Planquette et al. (2007), model. Refractory iron fluxes are ∼2 orders of magnitude larger, and these can only have come from particles advected from the plateau itself. The “biogenic Fe,” is a substantial fraction (0–76, mean 23%) of the total particulate Fe to the north of the islands. The origin of this Fe pool must be dominantly biological conversion from the lithogenic fraction, as other supply terms including aeolian, deep mixing, and lateral advection of dissolved Fe are inadequate to account for the magnitude of this Fe. Inclusion of the offshore biologically available fraction of the lithogenic iron flux is therefore required to calculate fully the yield of carbon exported per unit iron injected.