scholarly journals Potentially bioavailable iron produced through benthic cycling in glaciated Arctic fjords of Svalbard

2021 ◽  
Vol 12 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Katja Laufer-Meiser ◽  
Alexander B. Michaud ◽  
Markus Maisch ◽  
James M. Byrne ◽  
Andreas Kappler ◽  
...  

AbstractThe Arctic has the highest warming rates on Earth. Glaciated fjord ecosystems, which are hotspots of carbon cycling and burial, are extremely sensitive to this warming. Glaciers are important for the transport of iron from land to sea and supply this essential nutrient to phytoplankton in high-latitude marine ecosystems. However, up to 95% of the glacially-sourced iron settles to sediments close to the glacial source. Our data show that while 0.6–12% of the total glacially-sourced iron is potentially bioavailable, biogeochemical cycling in Arctic fjord sediments converts the glacially-derived iron into more labile phases, generating up to a 9-fold increase in the amount of potentially bioavailable iron. Arctic fjord sediments are thus an important source of potentially bioavailable iron. However, our data suggests that as glaciers retreat onto land the flux of iron to the sediment-water interface may be reduced. Glacial retreat therefore likely impacts iron cycling in coastal marine ecosystems.

2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Katja Laufer ◽  
Alexander Michaud ◽  
Markus Maisch ◽  
James Byrne ◽  
Andreas Kappler ◽  
...  

Abstract The Arctic has the highest warming rates world-wide. Glaciated fjord ecosystems, which are known hotspots of carbon cycling and burial, are predicted to be extremely sensitive to this warming. Glaciers are important sources of iron, an essential nutrient for phytoplankton, to high-latitude marine ecosystems. However, up to 95% of the glacially-sourced iron settles in sediments close to the glacial source. We found that only 0.6-12% of the total glacially-sourced iron is potentially bioavailable. Our results also show that biogeochemical cycling in fjord sediments converts the unreactive glacial iron into more reactive and bioavailable phases, leading to an up to 9-fold increase in the amount of potentially bioavailable iron. Arctic fjord sediments therefore likely are an important source of bioavailable iron. However, once glaciers retreat onto land, the flux of iron from sediments into the water column is reduced, such that glacial retreat could exacerbate iron limitation in polar oceans.


2016 ◽  
Vol 62 (2) ◽  
pp. 507-518 ◽  
Author(s):  
Michelle L. McCrackin ◽  
Holly P. Jones ◽  
Peter C. Jones ◽  
David Moreno-Mateos

Author(s):  
M. Burnett ◽  
A. Ng ◽  
D. Settle ◽  
C.C. Patterson

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