Mechanistic Constraints on the Drivers of Southern Ocean Meridional Iron Distributions Between Tasmania and Antarctica

Author:

Traill Christopher D.12ORCID,Conde‐Pardo Paula3,Rohr Tyler12ORCID,van der Merwe Pier14ORCID,Townsend Ashley T.5ORCID,Latour Pauline146ORCID,Gault‐Ringold Melanie4,Wuttig Kathrin4ORCID,Corkill Matthew1ORCID,Holmes Thomas M.2ORCID,Warner Mark J.7ORCID,Shadwick Elizabeth28ORCID,Bowie Andrew R.124ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Institute for Marine and Antarctic Studies, University of Tasmania Hobart TAS Australia

2. Australian Antarctic Program Partnership Hobart TAS Australia

3. Instituto de Investigaciones Marinas (IIM‐CSIC) Vigo, Pontevedra Spain

4. Antarctic Climate and Ecosystems Cooperative Research Centre Hobart TAS Australia

5. Central Science Laboratory University of Tasmania Hobart TAS Australia

6. Australian Centre for Excellence in Antarctic Science Hobart TAS Australia

7. School of Oceanography University of Washington Seattle WA USA

8. Environment, Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation (CSIRO) Hobart TAS Australia

Abstract

AbstractWhile modeling efforts have furthered our understanding of marine iron biogeochemistry and its influence on carbon sequestration, observations of dissolved iron (dFe) and its relationship to physical, chemical and biological processes in the ocean are needed to both validate and inform model parameterization. Where iron comes from, how it is transported and recycled, and where iron removal takes place are critical mechanisms that need to be understood to assess the relationship between iron availability and primary production. To this end, hydrographic and trace metal observations across the GO‐SHIP section SR3, south of Tasmania, Australia, have been analyzed in tandem with the novel application of an optimum multiparameter analysis. From the trace‐metal distribution south of Australia, key differences in the drivers of dFe between oceanographic zones of the Southern Ocean were identified. In the subtropical zone, sources of dFe were attributed to waters advected off the continental shelf, and to recirculated modified mode and intermediate water‐masses of the Tasman Outflow. In the subantarctic zone, the seasonal replenishment of dFe in Antarctic surface and mode waters appears to be sustained by iron recycling in the underlying mode and intermediate waters. In the southern zone, the dFe distribution is likely driven by dissolution and scavenging by high concentrations of particles along the Antarctic continental shelf and slope entrained in high salinity shelf water. This approach to trace metal analysis may prove useful in future transects for identifying key mechanisms driving marine dissolved trace metal distributions.

Publisher

American Geophysical Union (AGU)

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