| Literature DB >> 27819297 |
Darius Ceburnis1, Agne Masalaite2, Jurgita Ovadnevaite1, Andrius Garbaras2, Vidmantas Remeikis2, Willy Maenhaut3, Magda Claeys4, Jean Sciare5,6, Dominique Baisnée5, Colin D O'Dowd1.
Abstract
Stable carbon isotope ratios in marine aerosol collected over the Southern Indian Ocean revealed δ13C values ranging from -20.0‰ to -28.2‰. The isotope ratios exhibited a strong correlation with the fractional organic matter (OM) enrichment in sea spray aerosol. The base-level isotope ratio of -20.0‰ is characteristic of an aged Dissolved Organic Matter (DOM) pool contributing a relatively homogeneous background level of DOM to oceanic waters. The range of isotope ratios, extending down to -28.2‰, is characteristic of more variable, stronger, and fresher Particulate Organic Matter (POM) pool driven by trophic level interactions. We present a conceptual dual-pool POM-DOM model which comprises a 'young' and variable POM pool which dominates enrichment in sea-spray and an 'aged' but invariant DOM pool which is, ultimately, an aged end-product of processed 'fresh' POM. This model is harmonious with the preferential enrichment of fresh colloidal and nano-gel lipid-like particulate matter in sea spray particles and the observed depleted δ13C ratio resulting from isotope equilibrium fractionation coupled with enhanced plankton photosynthesis in cold water (-2 °C to +8 °C). These results re-assert the hypothesis that OM enrichment in sea-spray is directly linked to primary production and, consequently, can have implications for climate-aerosol-cloud feedback systems.Entities:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27819297 PMCID: PMC5098177 DOI: 10.1038/srep36675
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1OC fraction vs δ13C (HCO3− corrected) in fine (<2.5 μm in diameter) and coarse (>2.5 μm in diameter) particles at Amsterdam Island during the austral summer of 2007.
Figure 2Fractional OC dependence on δ13C in the fine (<2.5 μm in diameter) sea spray fraction combined with the simulations of the dual-pool mixing model.
The circle size represents sea salt concentration in μg m−3 with two actual concentrations noted next-to/inside it; circle colour represents the amount of OC in fine fraction; different colours of isolines represent simulations with fixed sea salt concentrations (light grey – 1.2 μg m−3, red – 1.7 μg m−3, purple – 2.7 μg m−3 and pale brown – 4.0 μg m−3); isolines represent carbon isotope ratios of phytoplankton (−30‰ to −25‰) related to sea surface temperatures within Circumpolar Antarctic Circulation (from −2 °C to +8 °C); light grey isolines represent full range of temperatures (from −2 °C to +20 °C) and corresponding phytoplankton isotope ratios (−30‰ to −19‰). Note maximum attainable fractional OC with different sea salt concentrations.
Figure 3Marine organic matter cycling corroborated by a proposed model.
Particulate organic matter (POM) in sea water is produced isotope-light by equilibrium fractionation during photosynthesis and is gradually processed by trophic level interactions in the ocean (weeks-to-years time-scale) to the isotope-heavy dissolved organic matter (DOM). Isotopically mixed sea spray organic matter (POA) undergoes kinetic fractionation by photochemistry and cloud-processing in the atmosphere on a weekly time-scale to isotope-heavy OM. Same scheme applies to secondary organic aerosol (SOA) formed directly or condensed on primary particles. Aged, processed and isotope-heavy OM is returned to the ocean contributing to the continuously recycled and replenished DOM pool. Ultimately the two end-member pools emerge – sequestered, isotope-light and recycled, isotope-heavy OM.