Identificador persistente para citar o vincular este elemento: http://hdl.handle.net/10553/73791
Título: Fe(II) stability in coastal seawater during experiments in Patagonia, Svalbard, and Gran Canaria
Autores/as: Hopwood, Mark J.
Santana González, Carolina 
Gallego-Urrea, Julian
Sanchez, Nicolas
Achterberg, Eric P.
Ardelan, Murat V.
Gledhill, Martha
González Dávila, Melchor 
Hoffmann, Linn
Leiknes, Øystein
Santana Casiano, Juana Magdalena 
Tsagaraki, Tatiana M.
Turner, David
Clasificación UNESCO: 251002 Oceanografía química
2503 Geoquímica
Fecha de publicación: 2020
Proyectos: Efecto de la Acidificación y Del Calentamiento Oceánico en El Comportamiento Biogeoquímico Del Fe en El Alántico Norte. 
Publicación seriada: Biogeosciences 
Resumen: The speciation of dissolved iron (DFe) in the ocean is widely assumed to consist almost exclusively of Fe(III)-ligand complexes. Yet in most aqueous environments a poorly defined fraction of DFe also exists as Fe(II), the speciation of which is uncertain. Here we deploy flow injection analysis to measure in situ Fe(II) concentrations during a series of mesocosm/microcosm/multistressor experiments in coastal environments in addition to the decay rate of this Fe(II) when moved into the dark. During five mesocosm/microcosm/multistressor experiments in Svalbard and Patagonia, where dissolved (0.2 μ m) Fe and Fe(II) were quantified simultaneously, Fe(II) constituted 24 %-65 % of DFe, suggesting that Fe(II) was a large fraction of the DFe pool. When this Fe(II) was allowed to decay in the dark, the vast majority of measured oxidation rate constants were less than calculated constants derived from ambient temperature, salinity, pH, and dissolved O2. The oxidation rates of Fe(II) spikes added to Atlantic seawater more closely matched calculated rate constants. The difference between observed and theoretical decay rates in Svalbard and Patagonia was most pronounced at Fe(II) concentrations < 2 nM, suggesting that the effect may have arisen from organic Fe(II) ligands. This apparent enhancement of Fe(II) stability under post-bloom conditions and the existence of such a high fraction of DFe as Fe(II) challenge the assumption that DFe speciation in coastal seawater is dominated by ligand boundFe(III) species.
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10553/73791
ISSN: 1726-4170
DOI: 10.5194/bg-17-1327-2020
Fuente: Biogeosciences [ISSN 1726-4170], n. 17, p. 1327–1342
Colección:Artículos
miniatura
Adobe PDF (2,51 MB)
Vista completa

Citas SCOPUSTM   

11
actualizado el 17-nov-2024

Citas de WEB OF SCIENCETM
Citations

10
actualizado el 17-nov-2024

Visitas

73
actualizado el 06-ene-2024

Descargas

77
actualizado el 06-ene-2024

Google ScholarTM

Verifica

Altmetric


Comparte



Exporta metadatos



Los elementos en ULPGC accedaCRIS están protegidos por derechos de autor con todos los derechos reservados, a menos que se indique lo contrario.