Dissolved iron in the Bermuda region of the subtropical North Atlantic Ocean: seasonal dynamics, mesoscale variability, and physicochemical speciation

Water-column data from seven cruises in 20072008 reveal pronounced temporal and spatial variations in the distribution of dissolved iron (DFe, <0.4μm) over the upper 1000m of the Sargasso Sea near Bermuda, in the western subtropical North Atlantic Ocean. In near-surface waters, DFe exhibits a cle...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Marine Chemistry
Main Authors: Sedwick, PN, Bowie, AR, Church, TM, Cullen, JT, Johnson, RJ, Lohan, MC, Marsay, CM, McGullicuddy Jr, DJ, Sohst, BM, Tabliabue, A, Ussher, SJ
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Elsevier Science Bv 2019
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1016/j.marchem.2019.103748
http://ecite.utas.edu.au/136878
Description
Summary:Water-column data from seven cruises in 20072008 reveal pronounced temporal and spatial variations in the distribution of dissolved iron (DFe, <0.4μm) over the upper 1000m of the Sargasso Sea near Bermuda, in the western subtropical North Atlantic Ocean. In near-surface waters, DFe exhibits a clear seasonal cycle, increasing from ~0.10.3nM in spring to ~0.41.0nM in summer-early fall. The observed seasonal ranges appear to reflect the extent of winter convective mixing and of summer dust deposition, both of which are closely tied to atmospheric circulation processes. Surface DFe concentrations also show significant (~two-fold) submesoscale lateral variations during summer, perhaps as a result of lateral inhomogeneities in wet deposition and wind-driven mixing. The summer vertical profiles reveal pronounced DFe minima and sometimes deeper maxima in the lower euphotic zone, which likely reflect biological uptake and shallow remineralization, and eddy-driven lateral gradients in these processes. Significant variability is also seen in the mesopelagic zone, with a DFe concentration range of ~0.40.7nM at 1000m depth, which may reflect mesoscale isopycnal displacements and/or lateral advection of iron-rich waters in the lower thermocline. Physicochemical iron speciation measurements indicate that the major fraction of DFe that accumulates in surface waters of the Sargasso Sea during summer is colloidal-sized Fe(III), which appears to be complexed by strong, iron-binding organic ligands. Concentrations of soluble iron (sFe, <0.02μm) were considerably lower than DFe in the upper euphotic zone during summer, except over the subsurface DFe minima, where sFe accounts for ~50100% of the DFe pool. Labile Fe(II), on average, accounted for around 20% of DFe, with maximum concentrations of around 0.1nM in near-surface waters and in the lower thermocline. The seasonal-scale DFe changes that we have documented near Bermuda are of the same magnitude as basin-scale lateral gradients across the North Atlantic, underscoring the ...