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The SOLAS air-sea gas exchange experiment (SAGE) 2004
Authors
Andrew Marriner
Archer
+96 more
Bathmann
Blain
Blain
Boyd
Boyd
Boyd
Boyd
Boyd
Boyd
Brian Ward
Browman
Brzezinski
Buesseler
Buesseler
Burns Macaskill
Canadell
Carr
Cliff S. Law
Coale
Coale
Craig L. Stevens
Craig McNeil
Cullen
Currie
D'Asaro
Dave Katz
David T. Ho
Dawn Devries
de Baar
Dugdale
Edward R. Abraham
Fairall
Feely
Graham B. Jones
Hadfield
Ho
Jill M. Cainey
Jill Peloquin
John McGregor
Jorma Kuparinen
Julie A. Hall
Karl A. Safi
Kim I. Currie
Kudo
Kuparinen
Law
Law
Le Quéré
Lenton
Liss
Liss
Lori A. Ziolkowski
Mark G. Hadfield
Martin
Matthew H. Pinkerton
Matthew Walkington
Michael J. Ellwood
Mike J. Harvey
Minnett
Mokhov
Morel
Murray J. Smith
Nightingale
Olsen
Peloquin
Peloquin
Peter Hill
Peter J. Minnett
Pollard
Popinet
Rona Thompson
Scott D. Nodder
Simon W. Wright
Smith
Stephen D. Archer
Stevens
Stuart Pickmere
Sura
Suzuki
Takahashi
Takahashi
Trull
Tsuda
Tsuda
Tsuda
Tsumune
van Oijen
Wanninkhof
Wanninkhof
Wanninkhof
Wanninkhof
Wanninkhof
Ward
William Main
Woolf
Zickfeld
Publication date
11 March 2010
Publisher
'Elsevier BV'
Doi
Abstract
Author Posting. © The Author(s), 2010. This is the author's version of the work. It is posted here by permission of Elsevier B.V. for personal use, not for redistribution. The definitive version was published in Deep Sea Research Part II: Topical Studies in Oceanography 58 (2011): 753-763, doi:10.1016/j.dsr2.2010.10.015.The SOLAS air-sea gas exchange experiment (SAGE) was a multiple-objective study investigating gas-transfer processes and the influence of iron fertilisation on biologically driven gas exchange in high-nitrate low-silicic acid low-chlorophyll (HNLSiLC) Sub-Antarctic waters characteristic of the expansive Subpolar Zone of the southern oceans. This paper provides a general introduction and summary of the main experimental findings. The release site was selected from a pre-voyage desktop study of environmental parameters to be in the south-west Bounty Trough (46.5°S 172.5°E) to the south-east of New Zealand and the experiment conducted between mid-March and mid-April 2004. In common with other mesoscale iron addition experiments (FeAX’s), SAGE was designed as a Lagrangian study quantifying key biological and physical drivers influencing the air-sea gas exchange processes of CO2, DMS and other biogenic gases associated with an iron-induced phytoplankton bloom. A dual tracer SF6/3He release enabled quantification of both the lateral evolution of a labelled volume (patch) of ocean and the air-sea tracer exchange at the 10’s of km’s scale, in conjunction with the iron fertilisation. Estimates from the dual-tracer experiment found a quadratic dependency of the gas exchange coefficient on windspeed that is widely applicable and describes air-sea gas exchange in strong wind regimes. Within the patch, local and micrometeorological gas exchange process studies (100 m scale) and physical variables such as near-surface turbulence, temperature microstructure at the interface, wave properties, and wind speed were quantified to further assist the development of gas exchange models for high-wind environments. There was a significant increase in the photosynthetic competence (Fv/Fm) of resident phytoplankton within the first day following iron addition, but in contrast to other FeAX’s, rates of net primary production and column-integrated chlorophyll a concentrations had only doubled relative to the unfertilised surrounding waters by the end of the experiment. After 15 days and four iron additions totalling 1.1 tonne Fe2+, this was a very modest response compared to the other mesoscale iron enrichment experiments. An investigation of the factors limiting bloom development considered co- limitation by light and other nutrients, the phytoplankton seed-stock and grazing regulation. Whilst incident light levels and the initial Si:N ratio were the lowest recorded in all FeAX’s to date, there was only a small seed-stock of diatoms (less than 1% of biomass) and the main response to iron addition was by the picophytoplankton. A high rate of dilution of the fertilised patch relative to phytoplankton growth rate, the greater than expected depth of the surface mixed layer and microzooplankton grazing were all considered as factors that prevented significant biomass accumulation. In line with the limited response, the enhanced biological draw-down of pCO2 was small and masked by a general increase in pCO2 due to mixing with higher pCO2 waters. The DMS precursor DMSP was kept in check through grazing activity and in contrast to most FeAX’s dissolved dimethylsulfide (DMS) concentration declined through the experiment. SAGE is an important low-end member in the range of responses to iron addition in FeAX’s. In the context of iron fertilisation as a geoengineering tool for atmospheric CO2 removal, SAGE has clearly demonstrated that a significant proportion of the low iron ocean may not produce a phytoplankton bloom in response to iron addition.SAGE was jointly funded through the New Zealand Foundation for Research, Science and Technology (FRST) programs (C01X0204) "Drivers and Mitigation of Global Change" and (C01X0223) "Ocean Ecosystems: Their Contribution to NZ Marine Productivity." Funding was also provided for specific collaborations by the US National Science Foundation from grants OCE-0326814 (Ward), OCE-0327779 (Ho), and OCE 0327188 OCE-0326814 (Minnett) and the UK Natural Environment Research Council NER/B/S/2003/00282 (Archer). The New Zealand International Science and Technology (ISAT) linkages fund provided additional funding (Archer and Ziolkowski), and the many collaborator institutions also provided valuable support
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