Antarctic sea ice region as a source of biogenic organic nitrogen in aerosols

Climate warming affects the development and distribution of sea ice, but at present the evidence of polar ecosystem feedbacks on climate through changes in the atmosphere is sparse. By means of synergistic atmospheric and oceanic measurements in the Southern Ocean near Antarctica, we present evidenc...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Scientific Reports
Main Authors: Dall’Osto, Manuel, Ovadnevaite, Jurgita, Paglione, Marco, Beddows, David C. S., Ceburnis, Darius, Cree, Charlotte, Cortés, Pau, Zamanillo, Marina, Nunes, Sdena O., Pérez, Gonzalo L., Ortega-Retuerta, Eva, Emelianov, Mikhail, Vaqué, Dolors, Marrasé, Cèlia, Estrada, Marta, Sala, M. Montserrat, Vidal, Montserrat, Fitzsimons, Mark F., Beale, Rachael, Airs, Ruth, Rinaldi, Matteo, Decesari, Stefano, Cristina Facchini, Maria, Harrison, Roy M., O’Dowd, Colin, Simó, Rafel
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:unknown
Published: Springer Nature 2017
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Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10379/11026
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-017-06188-x
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Summary:Climate warming affects the development and distribution of sea ice, but at present the evidence of polar ecosystem feedbacks on climate through changes in the atmosphere is sparse. By means of synergistic atmospheric and oceanic measurements in the Southern Ocean near Antarctica, we present evidence that the microbiota of sea ice and sea ice-influenced ocean are a previously unknown significant source of atmospheric organic nitrogen, including low molecular weight alkyl-amines. Given the keystone role of nitrogen compounds in aerosol formation, growth and neutralization, our findings call for greater chemical and source diversity in the modelling efforts linking the marine ecosystem to aerosol-mediated climate effects in the Southern Ocean.