Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
4439552 Atmospheric Environment 2011 8 Pages PDF
Abstract

Iron-addition experiments have revealed that iron supply exerts controls on biogeochemical cycles in the ocean and ultimately influences the Earth’s climate system. The iron hypothesis in its broad outlines has been proved to be correct. However, the hypothesis needs to be verified with an observable biological response to specific dust deposition events. Plankton growth following the Asian dust storm over Ocean Station PAPA (50°N, 145°W) in the North Pacific Ocean in April 2001 was the first supportive evidence of natural aeolian iron inputs to ocean; The data were obtained through the SeaWiFS satellite and robot carbon explorers by Bishop et al. Using the NARCM modeling results in this study, the calculated total dust deposition flux was 35 mg m−2 per day in PAPA region from the dust storm of 11–13 April, 2001 into 0.0615 mg m−2 d−1 (about 1100 nM) soluble iron in the surface layer at Station PAPA. It was enough for about 1100 nM to enhance the efficiency of the marine biological pump and trigger the rapid increase of POC and chlorophyll. The iron fertilization hypothesis therefore is plausible. However, even if this specific dust event can support the iron fertilization hypothesis, long-term observation data are lacking in marine export production and continental dust. In this paper, we also conducted a simple correlation analysis between the diatoms and foraminifera at about 3000 m and 4000 m at two subarctic Pacific stations and the dust aerosol production from China’s mainland. The correlation coefficient between marine export production and dust storm frequency in the core area of the dust storms was significantly high, suggesting that aerosols generated by Asian dust storm are the source of iron for organic matter fixation in the North Pacific Ocean. These results suggest that there could be an interlocking chain for the change of atmospheric dust aerosol–soluble iron–marine export production.

► Asian dust deposition flux of 35 mg m−2day−1 was simulated in the subarctic Pacific. ► Aerosols from Asian dust storm are the iron sources for organic matter fixation. ► The deep Pacific diatoms and foraminifera are correlated with Asian dust production. ► A chain interlocks for Asian dust aerosols, soluble iron and marine export production.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Earth and Planetary Sciences Atmospheric Science
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