Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
1261231 Marine Chemistry 2015 9 Pages PDF
Abstract

•Distribution of dissolved Fe was investigated in the eastern tropical South Pacific.•Dissolved Fe concentration was exceedingly low in the surface water.•Fe(II) showed maxima coincident with the secondary nitrite maxima.•Fe(II) and organic Fe(III)-ligands coexisted in the anoxic water.•Anoxic water is important in Fe transport in the upper 400 m in this region.

The distributions of dissolved iron (Fe), Fe(II) and Fe(III)-binding organic ligands were investigated in the upper 1000 m of the eastern tropical South Pacific from January to March 2010, during an El Niño event. Dissolved Fe concentrations were exceedingly low in surface waters, showed minima near the chlorophyll maxima, and increased below that depth. High rates of nitrogen fixation have been inferred for this region from models, but our data suggest that surface Fe is frequently too low to support diazotrophs. Dissolved Fe and organic Fe(III) ligand concentrations at mid-depth were elevated in the nearshore stations, where virtually all dissolved Fe(III) was bound to these ligands. Subsurface Fe(II) maxima were observed in the secondary nitrite maxima of the oxygen minimum zone (OMZ), comprising 8 to 68% of dissolved Fe. Dissolved Fe concentrations displayed local maxima coinciding with the maxima in Fe(II) and nitrite. We propose that this zone, the most reducing part of the OMZ, plays an important role in Fe transport in the upper 400 m of the water column.

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