Phytoplankton community response to episodic wet and dry aerosol deposition in the subtropical North Atlantic

Author:

Yuan Zhongwei12ORCID,Achterberg Eric P.1,Engel Anja1ORCID,Wen Zuozhu12ORCID,Zhou Linbin13ORCID,Zhu Xunchi14,Dai Minhan2,Browning Thomas J.1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Marine Biogeochemistry Division GEOMAR Helmholtz Centre for Ocean Research Kiel Germany

2. State Key Laboratory of Marine Environmental Science, College of Ocean and Earth Sciences Xiamen University Xiamen China

3. CAS Key Laboratory of Tropical Marine Bio‐resources and Ecology, Guangdong Provincial Key Laboratory of Applied Marine Biology, South China Sea Institute of Oceanology Chinese Academy of Sciences Guangzhou China

4. State Key Laboratory of Marine Resource Utilization in South China Sea Hainan University Haikou China

Abstract

AbstractAtmospheric aerosol deposition into the low latitude oligotrophic ocean is an important source of new nutrients for primary production. However, the resultant phytoplankton responses to aerosol deposition events, both in magnitude and changes in community composition, are poorly constrained. Here, we investigated this with 19 d of field and satellite observations for a site in the subtropical North Atlantic. During the observation period, surface dissolved aluminum concentrations alongside satellite‐derived aerosol and precipitation data demonstrated the occurrence of both a dry deposition event associated with a dust storm and a wet deposition event associated with strong rainfall. The dry deposition event did not lead to any observable phytoplankton response, whereas the wet deposition event led to an approximate doubling of chlorophyll a, with Prochlorococcus becoming more dominant at the expense of Synechococcus. Bioassay experiments showed that phytoplankton were nitrogen limited, suggesting that the wet deposition event likely provided substantial aerosol‐derived nitrogen, thereby alleviating the prevalent nutrient limitation and leading to the rapid observed phytoplankton response. These findings highlight the important role of wet deposition in driving rapid responses in both ocean productivity and phytoplankton community composition.

Funder

Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Aquatic Science,Oceanography

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