Subsurface iron accumulation and rapid aluminum removal in the Mediterranean following African dust deposition
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Published:2021-12-15
Issue:24
Volume:18
Page:6435-6453
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ISSN:1726-4189
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Container-title:Biogeosciences
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language:en
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Short-container-title:Biogeosciences
Author:
Bressac MatthieuORCID, Wagener ThibautORCID, Leblond Nathalie, Tovar-Sánchez AntonioORCID, Ridame CélineORCID, Taillandier Vincent, Albani SamuelORCID, Guasco Sophie, Dufour Aurélie, Jacquet Stéphanie H. M., Dulac François, Desboeufs Karine, Guieu CécileORCID
Abstract
Abstract. Mineral dust deposition is an important supply mechanism
for trace elements in the low-latitude ocean. Our understanding of the
controls of such inputs has been mostly built on laboratory and surface
ocean studies. The lack of direct observations and the tendency to focus on
near-surface waters prevent a comprehensive evaluation of the role of dust
in oceanic biogeochemical cycles. In the frame of the PEACETIME project
(ProcEss studies at the Air-sEa Interface after dust deposition in the
MEditerranean sea), the responses of the aluminum (Al) and iron (Fe) cycles
to two dust wet deposition events over the central and western Mediterranean
Sea were investigated at a timescale of hours to days using a comprehensive
dataset gathering dissolved and suspended particulate concentrations, along
with sinking fluxes. Dissolved Al (dAl) removal was dominant over dAl released from dust. The Fe/Al
ratio of suspended and sinking particles revealed that biogenic particles,
and in particular diatoms, were key in accumulating and exporting Al
relative to Fe. By combining these observations with published Al/Si ratios
of diatoms, we show that adsorption onto biogenic particles, rather than
active uptake, represents the main sink for dAl in Mediterranean waters. In
contrast, systematic dissolved Fe (dFe) accumulation occurred in subsurface
waters (∼ 100–1000 m), while dFe input from dust was only
transient in the surface mixed layer. The rapid transfer of dust to depth,
the Fe-binding ligand pool in excess to dFe in subsurface (while
nearly saturated in surface), and low scavenging rates in this particle-poor
depth horizon are all important drivers of this subsurface dFe enrichment. At the annual scale, this previously overlooked mechanism may represent an
additional pathway of dFe supply for the surface ocean through diapycnal
diffusion and vertical mixing. However, low subsurface dFe concentrations
observed at the basin scale (< 0.5 nmol kg−1) cause us to question the
residence time for this dust-derived subsurface reservoir and hence its
role as a supply mechanism for the surface ocean, stressing the need for
further studies. Finally, these contrasting responses indicate that dAl is a
poor tracer of dFe input in the Mediterranean Sea.
Publisher
Copernicus GmbH
Subject
Earth-Surface Processes,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics
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