Author:
Shi Qiang,Wallace Douglas
Abstract
Abstract. We report weekly observations of volatile organic iodocarbons
(CH3I, CH2ClI and CH2I2) over the
time period May 2015 to December 2017 from four depths in Bedford Basin, a
coastal fjord (70 m deep) on the Atlantic coast of Canada. The fjord is
subject to wintertime mixing, seasonal stratification and bloom dynamics,
subsurface oxygen depletion, local input of freshwater, and occasional
intrusions of higher-density water from the adjacent continental shelf.
Near-surface concentrations showed strong seasonal and sub-seasonal
variability, which is compared with other coastal time series. The vertical
variation of CH2I2 and CH2ClI within the upper 10 m is
consistent with rapid photolysis of CH2I2. Average annual
sea-to-air fluxes (46.7 nmol m−2 day−1) of total volatile
organic iodine were similar to those observed in other coastal and shelf
time series, and polyiodinated compounds contributed 80 % of the total flux.
Fluxes were subject to strong interannual variability (a factor of 2)
mainly due to wind speed variability. Near-surface net production of
CH3I averaged 1 pmol L−1 day−1 and was similar to
rates in the English Channel but an order of magnitude higher than in shallow
waters of the Kiel Fjord, Germany, possibly due to higher microbial
degradation in the latter. The near-bottom (60 m) time series showed
evidence of CH3I production associated with organic matter
degradation and a possible “switch” from the production of CH3I via
an alkylation pathway to the production of CH2I2 by a haloform-type
reaction. Near-bottom CH3I production varied strongly between years
but was generally ca. 20 times lower than near-surface production.
Subject
Cell Biology,Developmental Biology,Embryology,Anatomy
Cited by
10 articles.
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