Nitrogen deposition to the eastern Atlantic Ocean. The importance of south-easterly flow
143
TL;DR: In this article, the role of the atmosphere as a source of biologically essential species, including nitrate and ammonium, to the marine biota was investigated using data collected at both Mace Head and at sea aboard RRS Challenger.
read more
Abstract: Converting measured concentrations into fluxes and using estimates of biological productivity in the coastal waters of the eastern Atlantic Ocean enables us to determine the role of the atmosphere as a source of biologically essential species, including nitrate and ammonium, to the marine biota. To understand the effects of the atmosphere as a source of nitrogen capable of promoting new production, we need to know both the seasonality of the input as well as the effects of extreme high deposition events which, while small in overall annual budget terms, maybe able to extend, or even promote, phytoplankton growth under nutrient depleted summer conditions. Aerosols and rainwater were collected at both Mace Head and at sea aboard RRS Challenger . Temporal patterns have been interpreted using airmass back trajectories which give the predicted air path prior to arrival at the sampling site. Low levels of both nitrate and ammonium are seen associated with marine westerly flow across the Atlantic and northerly air originating in the Arctic region. As expected, marine derived sodium, chloride, magnesium and seasalt sulphate are high during these periods. High concentration nitrate and ammonium events are seen associated with south-easterly flow where the airmass passes over the UK and northern Europe prior to arrival on the west coast of Ireland. In the polluted atmosphere, nitrate exists as nitric acid and as fine mode ( 1 μm diameter) sodium nitrate: HNO 3 (g) + NaCl(s) → NaNO 3 (s) + HCl(g). This seasalt displacement reaction not only enhances dry nitrate deposition through more efficient gravitational settling of large particles, but also increases the efficiency of precipitational scavenging via inertial impaction. By looking at the size distribution of nitrate, we can see evidence for the seasalt displacement reaction. Under the polluted south-easterly flow, ∼40−60% of the nitrate occurs in the coarse mode fraction. Under clean marine conditions, the seasalt displacement reaction results in almost complete conversion of nitrate from the fine to the coarse aerosol mode. By converting measured wet and dry nitrate, ammonium and organic nitrogen concentrations into fluxes and comparing the data with estimates of biological productivity in the surface waters, our data suggest that ∼30% of new production in eastern Atlantic surface waters off Ireland can be supported by atmospheric inputs in May 1997 and that most of the input occurs during short lived, high-concentration, south-easterly transport events. DOI: 10.1034/j.1600-0889.2000.00062.x
read more
Chat with Paper
AI Agents for this Paper
Find similar papers on Google Scholar, PubMed and Arxiv
Write a critical review of this paper
Analyze citations of this paper to find unaddressed research gaps
Citations
Use of the ACDEP trajectory model in the Danish nation-wide Background Monitoring Programme
TL;DR: In this article, the atmospheric nitrogen load in Danish marine waters is determined within the framework of the Danish Background Monitoring Programme (DBMP) by using both measurements and model calculations, where the modelling part receives the main focus.
44
Influence of atmospheric dry deposition of inorganic nutrients on phytoplankton biomass in the coastal Bay of Bengal
TL;DR: In this paper, the composition of aerosols over the city of Visakhapatnam was studied when continental flow was dominant and its impact on phytoplankton biomass was estimated through microcosm experiments between September 2013 and November 2014.
43
Atmospheric inorganic nitrogen input via dry, wet, and sea fog deposition to the subarctic western North Pacific Ocean
TL;DR: In this paper, a cruise conducted over the subarctic western North Pacific Ocean in the summer of 2008 was used to estimate dry, wet, and sea fog deposition fluxes of atmospheric inorganic nitrogen (N).
Atmospheric inorganic nitrogen in marine aerosol and precipitation and its deposition to the North and South Pacific Oceans
TL;DR: Aerosol and rain samples were collected between 48°N and 55°S during the KH-08-2 and MR08-06 cruises conducted over the North and South Pacific Ocean in 2008 and 2009, to estimate dry and wet deposition fluxes of atmospheric inorganic nitrogen (N) as discussed by the authors.
41
Characteristics, sources and environmental implications of atmospheric wet nitrogen and sulfur deposition in Yangtze River Delta
Zhili Chen,Tao Huang,Xiao-Hu Huang,Xiu-Xiu Han,Hao Yang,Zucong Cai,Lin Yao,Xiao Han,Meigen Zhang,Changchun Huang +9 more
TL;DR: Wang et al. as discussed by the authors measured wet nitrogen and sulfur (S) deposition rates on different land use types in the same region using wet-only auto-samplers, and the wet N and S deposition rates were measured at three sites with different land uses (urban, agriculture, and lake) in the Yangtze River Delta (YRD), Eastern China.
40
References
•Book
A manual of chemical and biological methods for seawater analysis
Timothy R. Parsons,Yoshiaki Maita,Carol M. Lalli +2 more
- 01 Jan 1984
TL;DR: In this article, the authors describe counting, media, and preservatives for analytical techniques, including soluble organic material, plant pigments, and photosynthesis in seawater, and show how to count media and preservative.
6.9K
Uptake of new and regenerated forms of nitrogen in primary productivity1
TL;DR: The role of zooplankton in regenerating nitrogen as ammonia in the Sargasso Sea is examined theoretically in this article, showing that only about 10% of the daily ammonia uptake by phytoplanton living in the upper 100 m.
2.8K
Coastal marine eutrophication: A definition, social causes, and future concerns
TL;DR: There is a need in the marine research and management communities for a clear operational definition of the term, eutrophication, and the following are proposed: this definition is consistent with historical usage and emphasizes that eUTrophication is a process, not a trophic state.
2.7K
Particulate organic matter flux and planktonic new production in the deep ocean
TL;DR: The primary production in the oceans results from allochthonous nutrient inputs to the euphotic zone (new production) and from nutrient recycling in the surface waters (regenerated production) as discussed by the authors.
2.6K
The atmospheric input of trace species to the world ocean
Robert A. Duce,Peter S. Liss,John T. Merrill,Elliot Atlas,Patrick Buat-Ménard,B. B. Hicks,John M. Miller,Joseph M. Prospero,Richard Arimoto,Thomas M. Church,W. G. Ellis,James N. Galloway,LeRoy Hansen,Tim Jickells,Anthony H. Knap,K. H. Reinhardt,B. Schneider,A. Soudine,J. J. Tokos,S. Tsunogai,R. Wollast,M. Y. Zhou +21 more
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors assess current data in this area, develop global scale estimates of the atmospheric fluxes of trace elements, mineral aerosol, nitrogen species, and synthetic organic compounds to the ocean; and compare the atmospheric input rates of these substances to their input via rivers.
1.7K
Related Papers (5)
Robert A. Duce,Peter S. Liss,John T. Merrill,Elliot Atlas,Patrick Buat-Ménard,B. B. Hicks,John M. Miller,Joseph M. Prospero,Richard Arimoto,Thomas M. Church,W. G. Ellis,James N. Galloway,LeRoy Hansen,Tim Jickells,Anthony H. Knap,K. H. Reinhardt,B. Schneider,A. Soudine,J. J. Tokos,S. Tsunogai,R. Wollast,M. Y. Zhou +21 more
Robert A. Duce,Julie LaRoche,Katye E. Altieri,Kevin R. Arrigo,Alex R. Baker,Douglas G. Capone,Sarah Cornell,Frank Dentener,James N. Galloway,Raja S. Ganeshram,Richard J. Geider,Tim Jickells,Marcel M. M. Kuypers,Rebecca Langlois,Peter S. Liss,Sumei Liu,Jack J. Middelburg,C. M. Moore,Slobodan Nickovic,Andreas Oschlies,Thomas F. Pedersen,Joseph M. Prospero,Reiner Schlitzer,Sybil P. Seitzinger,Lise Lotte Sørensen,Mitsuo Uematsu,Osvaldo Ulloa,Maren Voss,Bess B. Ward,Lauren Zamora +29 more