Abstract
The GEOTRACES program has greatly expanded measurements of trace elements, which serve as key nutrients, harmful contaminants, and tracers of ocean processes and past conditions. Many elements tend to associate with particulate matter, and GEOTRACES has been particularly valuable for growing our understanding of this fraction. Focusing on the micronutrient iron as an example, GEOTRACES data demonstrate that the majority of iron in the ocean is particulate. Chemically labile particulate iron, likely available for biological use, is also often more abundant than dissolved forms, particularly near continents and in the deep sea. This highlights the need to consider the particulate fraction in conceptual and numeric ocean models. Direct comparisons of particle-sampling methods highlight both the abundance of small particles (<0.45–0.8 μm), whose biogeochemical roles are still poorly known, and the difficulty in consistently capturing large, faster-sinking particles. In situ pumps with 0.8 μm filters often capture less small particulate iron than bottle-collected samples filtered onto 0.45 μm filters, but they can also capture more material near some sources. GEOTRACES datasets contain nearly sevenfold more dissolved than particulate iron measurements, and ongoing efforts to pair these measurements are needed in order to fully understand the cycles of iron and other important elements.
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2 articles.
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