scholarly journals Manganese in the world ocean: a first global model

Author(s):  
Marco van Hulten ◽  
Jean-Claude Dutay ◽  
Rob Middag ◽  
Hein de Baar ◽  
Matthieu Roy-Barman ◽  
...  

Abstract. Dissolved manganese (Mn) is a biologically essential element. Moreover, its oxidised form is involved in the removal of itself and several other trace elements from ocean waters. Recently, a large number of highly accurate Mn measurements has been obtained in the Atlantic, Indian and Arctic Oceans as part of the GEOTRACES programme. The goal of this study is to combine these new observations with state-of-the-art modelling to give new insights into the main sources and redistribution of Mn throughout the ocean. To this end, we simulate the distribution of dissolved Mn using a global-scale circulation model. Our model reproduces observations accurately and provides the following insights: – The high surface concentrations of manganese are caused by the combination of photoreduction and sources to the upper ocean. The most important sources are dust, then sediments, and, more locally, rivers. – Results show that surface Mn in the Atlantic Ocean moves downwards into the North Atlantic Deep Water, but because of strong removal rates the Mn does not propagate southwards. – There is a mostly homogeneous background concentration of dissolved Mn of about 0.10 nM to 0.15 nM throughout most of the deep ocean. The model reproduces this by means of a threshold on particulate manganese oxides of 25 pM, suggesting that a minimal concentration of particulate Mn is needed before aggregation and removal become efficient. – The observed sharp hydrothermal signals are produced by assuming both a high source and a strong removal of Mn near hydrothermal vents.

2017 ◽  
Vol 14 (5) ◽  
pp. 1123-1152 ◽  
Author(s):  
Marco van Hulten ◽  
Rob Middag ◽  
Jean-Claude Dutay ◽  
Hein de Baar ◽  
Matthieu Roy-Barman ◽  
...  

Abstract. Dissolved manganese (Mn) is a biologically essential element. Moreover, its oxidised form is involved in removing itself and several other trace elements from ocean waters. Here we report the longest thus far (17 500 km length) full-depth ocean section of dissolved Mn in the west Atlantic Ocean, comprising 1320 data values of high accuracy. This is the GA02 transect that is part of the GEOTRACES programme, which aims to understand trace element distributions. The goal of this study is to combine these new observations with new, state-of-the-art, modelling to give a first assessment of the main sources and redistribution of Mn throughout the ocean. To this end, we simulate the distribution of dissolved Mn using a global-scale circulation model. This first model includes simple parameterisations to account for the sources, processes and sinks of Mn in the ocean. Oxidation and (photo)reduction, aggregation and settling, as well as biological uptake and remineralisation by plankton are included in the model. Our model provides, together with the observations, the following insights: – The high surface concentrations of manganese are caused by the combination of photoreduction and sources contributing to the upper ocean. The most important sources are sediments, dust, and, more locally, rivers. – Observations and model simulations suggest that surface Mn in the Atlantic Ocean moves downwards into the southward-flowing North Atlantic Deep Water (NADW), but because of strong removal rates there is no elevated concentration of Mn visible any more in the NADW south of 40° N. – The model predicts lower dissolved Mn in surface waters of the Pacific Ocean than the observed concentrations. The intense oxygen minimum zone (OMZ) in subsurface waters is deemed to be a major source of dissolved Mn also mixing upwards into surface waters, but the OMZ is not well represented by the model. Improved high-resolution simulation of the OMZ may solve this problem. – There is a mainly homogeneous background concentration of dissolved Mn of about 0.10–0.15 nM throughout most of the deep ocean. The model reproduces this by means of a threshold on particulate manganese oxides of 25 pM, suggesting that a minimal concentration of particulate Mn is needed before aggregation and removal become efficient. – The observed distinct hydrothermal signals are produced by assuming both a strong source and a strong removal of Mn near hydrothermal vents.


Ocean Science ◽  
2010 ◽  
Vol 6 (4) ◽  
pp. 983-995 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. P. Matano ◽  
E. D. Palma ◽  
A. R. Piola

Abstract. The oceanic circulation over the southwestern Atlantic shelf is influenced by large tidal amplitudes, substantial freshwater discharges, high wind speeds and – most importantly – by its proximity to two of the largest western boundary currents of the world ocean: the Brazil and Malvinas currents. This review article aims to discriminate the dynamical processes controlling the interaction between this extensive shelf region and the deep-ocean. The discussion is focused on two broad regions: the South Brazil Bight to the north, and Patagonia to the south. The exchanges between the Brazil Current and the South Brazil Bight are characterized by the intermittent development of eddies and meanders of the Brazil Current at the shelfbreak. However, it is argued that this is not the only – nor the most important – influence of the Brazil Current on the shelf. Numerical simulations show that the thermohaline structure of the South Brazil Bight can be entirely ascribed to steady state, bottom boundary layer interactions between the shelf and the Brazil Current. The Malvinas Current does not show the development of eddies and meanders, but its influence on the Patagonian shelf is not less important. Models and observations indicate that the Malvinas Current not only controls the shelfbreak dynamics and cross-shelf exchanges but also influences the circulation in the shelf's interior.


2021 ◽  
Vol 14 (2) ◽  
pp. 50-62
Author(s):  
Dmitry V. Pozdnyakov ◽  
Natalia V. Gnatiuk ◽  
Richard Davy ◽  
Leonid P. Bobylev

Emiliania huxleyi (Lohmann) evolved from the genus Gephyrocapsa Kamptner (Prymneosiophyceae) of the coccolithophore family Naёlaerhadaceae. Over the past 100 thousand years E. huxleyi has acquired the status of the most ecologically predominant coccolithophore due to its remarkable adaptability to a variety of environmental conditions and interspecific competitiveness. E. huxleyi plays an important role in both the marine carbon system and carbon cycling between the atmosphere and ocean due to its ability to produce organic and inorganic carbon as well as to form massive blooms throughout the world ocean. This study examines both older information and recent findings to shed light on the current tendencies in the two-way interactions between E. huxleyi blooms and the immediate and global environment under conditions of climate change. The assembled knowledge has emerged from laboratory and mesocosm instrumental investigations, retrievals of satellite remote sensing data, machine learning/statistical analyses, and numerical simulations. Special attention is given to both the quantitative data reported over the last two decades on such interactions, and the only very recently appearing mid-term projections of E. huxleyi bloom dynamics across the world ocean. These blooms strongly affect the atmosphere and ocean carbon cycles. They reduce CO2 fluxes from by ~50% to ~150% as is documented for the North Atlantic, and on the global scale release particulate inorganic carbon as calcium calcite in the amounts assessed at 0.4 to 4.8 PgC/yr. At the same time, they are also sensitive to the atmospheric and oceanic state. This results in E. huxleyi blooms having an increased impact on the environment in response to ongoing global warming.


Ocean Science ◽  
2016 ◽  
Vol 12 (6) ◽  
pp. 1205-1220 ◽  
Author(s):  
Bogi Hansen ◽  
Karin Margretha Húsgarð Larsen ◽  
Hjálmar Hátún ◽  
Svein Østerhus

Abstract. The Faroe Bank Channel (FBC) is the deepest passage across the Greenland–Scotland Ridge (GSR) and there is a continuous deep flow of cold and dense water passing through it from the Arctic Mediterranean into the North Atlantic and further to the rest of the world ocean. This FBC overflow is part of the Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation (AMOC), which has recently been suggested to have weakened. From November 1995 to May 2015, the FBC overflow has been monitored by a continuous ADCP (acoustic Doppler current profiler) mooring, which has been deployed in the middle of this narrow channel. Combined with regular hydrography cruises and several short-term mooring experiments, this allowed us to construct time series of volume transport and to follow changes in the hydrographic properties and density of the FBC overflow. The mean kinematic overflow, derived solely from the velocity field, was found to be (2.2 ± 0.2) Sv (1 Sv  =  106 m3 s−1) with a slight, but not statistically significant, positive trend. The coldest part, and probably the bulk, of the FBC overflow warmed by a bit more than 0.1 °C, especially after 2002, increasing the transport of heat into the deep ocean. This warming was, however, accompanied by increasing salinities, which seem to have compensated for the temperature-induced density decrease. Thus, the FBC overflow has remained stable in volume transport as well as density during the 2 decades from 1995 to 2015. After crossing the GSR, the overflow is modified by mixing and entrainment, but the associated change in volume (and heat) transport is still not well known. Whatever effect this has on the AMOC and the global energy balance, our observed stability of the FBC overflow is consistent with reported observations from the other main overflow branch, the Denmark Strait overflow, and the three Atlantic inflow branches to the Arctic Mediterranean that feed the overflows. If the AMOC has weakened during the last 2 decades, it is not likely to have been due to its northernmost extension – the exchanges across the Greenland–Scotland Ridge.


2004 ◽  
Vol 17 (23) ◽  
pp. 4575-4589 ◽  
Author(s):  
Charles Jones ◽  
Duane E. Waliser ◽  
K. M. Lau ◽  
W. Stern

Abstract This study investigates 1) the eastward propagation of the Madden–Julian oscillation (MJO) and global occurrences of extreme precipitation, 2) the degree to which a general circulation model with a relatively realistic representation of the MJO simulates its influence on extremes, and 3) a possible modulation of the MJO on potential predictability of extreme precipitation events. The observational analysis shows increased frequency of extremes during active MJO phases in many locations. On a global scale, extreme events during active MJO periods are about 40% higher than in quiescent phases of the oscillation in locations of statistically significant signals. A 10-yr National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) Goddard Laboratory for the Atmospheres (GLA) GCM simulation with fixed climatological SSTs is used to generate a control run and predictability experiments. Overall, the GLA model has a realistic representation of extremes in tropical convective regions associated with the MJO, although some shortcomings also seem to be present. The GLA model shows a robust signal in the frequency of extremes in the North Pacific and on the west coast of North America, which somewhat agrees with observational studies. The analysis of predictability experiments indicates higher success in the prediction of extremes during an active MJO than in quiescent situations. Overall, the predictability experiments indicate the mean number of correct forecasts of extremes during active MJO periods to be nearly twice the correct number of extremes during quiescent phases of the oscillation in locations of statistically significant signals.


2010 ◽  
Vol 7 (2) ◽  
pp. 837-871 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. P. Matano ◽  
E. D. Palma ◽  
A. R. Piola

Abstract. The oceanic circulation over the southwestern Atlantic shelf is influenced by large tidal amplitudes, substantial freshwater discharges, high wind speeds and – most importantly – by its proximity to two of the largest western boundary currents of the world ocean: the Brazil and Malvinas currents. This review article aims to describe the dynamical processes controlling the interaction between the shelf and the deep-ocean. The discussion is focused on two broad regions: the South Brazil Bight to the north, and Patagonia to the south. The exchanges between the Brazil Current and the South Brazil Bight are characterized by the intermittent development of eddies and meanders of the Brazil Current at the shelfbreak. However, it is argued that this is not the only – nor the most important – influence of the Brazil Current on the shelf. Numerical simulations show that the thermohaline structure of the South Brazil Bight can be entirely ascribed to steady state, bottom boundary layer interactions between the shelf and the Brazil Current. The Malvinas Current does not show the development of eddies and meanders, but its influence on the Patagonian shelf is no less important. Models and observations indicate that the Malvinas Current not only controls the shelfbreak dynamics and cross-shelf exchanges but also the circulation in the shelf's interior.


1990 ◽  
Vol 14 ◽  
pp. 328-328 ◽  
Author(s):  
Knut Aagaard

Rapid melting of continental ice during deglaciations has been hypothesized to shift the thermohaline circulation of the world ocean to a mode radically different from the one dominated by the North Atlantic, such as operates today. This scenario has been referred to as the halocline catastrophe. We consider here the freezing, transport, and melting of sea ice in the North Atlantic sector as a possible modern analog to such events.The rejection of salt during the freezing and subsequent development of sea ice results, by early summer, in ice with only 5–10% of its original salt content. Since sea ice several meters thick is typically formed annually in the polar regions, the distillation rates from freezing are fully comparable to those from evaporation in such highly evaporative basins as the Red Sea. If the ice is subsequently exported from its production area, then freezing and melting are the oceanic equivalent of the hydrologic cycle. In the Arctic, the major ice outflow from the 107 km2 of the Polar Basin occurs east of Greenland, where the exodus represents a fresh-water transport of at least 2800 km3 a−1. This is a discharge more than twice that of North America’s four largest rivers combined.The fresh water can subsequently be traced around the subpolar gyre of the North Atlantic, on its way transferring small but significant amounts of buoyancy into the interior convective gyres, e.g. in the Greenland Sea. The convection which occurs in these gyres under present climatic conditions makes them major ventilation and water mass formation sites for the deep world ocean, but because the density of sea water at constant pressure and low temperature is almost solely dependent on salinity, the convection is extremely sensitive to changes in the freshwater supply to the gyres. Small variations in the supply will be transferred into the deep ocean by convection, where they will be manifested by a cooling and freshening, such as has recently been observed in the deep North Atlantic. However, if the surface layers are freshened too much, cooling even to the freezing point will be insufficient to initiate convection. Instead, the convective gyres will be capped by a fresh-water lid, essentially what has been proposed in the halocline catastrophe scenarios. During such events, sea ice will form in the gyres, sometimes with disastrous consequences, as occurred north of Iceland during the late 1960s when, during the extreme years of 1965 and 1968, the entire north and east coasts of Iceland were enveloped by sea ice; at the same time, renewal to the north of the deep ocean waters diminished or ceased.We suggest that the present-day Greenland and Iceland seas, and probably also the Labrador Sea, are rather delicately poised with respect to their ability to sustain convection, and that we have in fact during the past several decades seen a small-scale analog to the halocline catastrophe proposed for past deglaciations. A major difference is that the present situation does not require dramatic increases in fresh-water flux to effect a capping of the convection; nor does it depend on deglaciation. Rather, very modest changes in the disposition of the fresh water presently carried by the East Greenland Current can alter or stop the convection; and the principal source of fresh water is sea ice, rather than glacial ice. The essence of the present situation is that the large fresh-water output from the Arctic Ocean, which is the distillate of freezing, passes perilously close to the very weakly stratified convective gyres; and that the stratification in these gyres is easily perturbed, either by variations in the discharge from the Arctic Ocean or by leaks or recirculation from the boundary current.


1990 ◽  
Vol 14 ◽  
pp. 328
Author(s):  
Knut Aagaard

Rapid melting of continental ice during deglaciations has been hypothesized to shift the thermohaline circulation of the world ocean to a mode radically different from the one dominated by the North Atlantic, such as operates today. This scenario has been referred to as the halocline catastrophe. We consider here the freezing, transport, and melting of sea ice in the North Atlantic sector as a possible modern analog to such events. The rejection of salt during the freezing and subsequent development of sea ice results, by early summer, in ice with only 5–10% of its original salt content. Since sea ice several meters thick is typically formed annually in the polar regions, the distillation rates from freezing are fully comparable to those from evaporation in such highly evaporative basins as the Red Sea. If the ice is subsequently exported from its production area, then freezing and melting are the oceanic equivalent of the hydrologic cycle. In the Arctic, the major ice outflow from the 107 km2 of the Polar Basin occurs east of Greenland, where the exodus represents a fresh-water transport of at least 2800 km3 a−1. This is a discharge more than twice that of North America’s four largest rivers combined. The fresh water can subsequently be traced around the subpolar gyre of the North Atlantic, on its way transferring small but significant amounts of buoyancy into the interior convective gyres, e.g. in the Greenland Sea. The convection which occurs in these gyres under present climatic conditions makes them major ventilation and water mass formation sites for the deep world ocean, but because the density of sea water at constant pressure and low temperature is almost solely dependent on salinity, the convection is extremely sensitive to changes in the freshwater supply to the gyres. Small variations in the supply will be transferred into the deep ocean by convection, where they will be manifested by a cooling and freshening, such as has recently been observed in the deep North Atlantic. However, if the surface layers are freshened too much, cooling even to the freezing point will be insufficient to initiate convection. Instead, the convective gyres will be capped by a fresh-water lid, essentially what has been proposed in the halocline catastrophe scenarios. During such events, sea ice will form in the gyres, sometimes with disastrous consequences, as occurred north of Iceland during the late 1960s when, during the extreme years of 1965 and 1968, the entire north and east coasts of Iceland were enveloped by sea ice; at the same time, renewal to the north of the deep ocean waters diminished or ceased. We suggest that the present-day Greenland and Iceland seas, and probably also the Labrador Sea, are rather delicately poised with respect to their ability to sustain convection, and that we have in fact during the past several decades seen a small-scale analog to the halocline catastrophe proposed for past deglaciations. A major difference is that the present situation does not require dramatic increases in fresh-water flux to effect a capping of the convection; nor does it depend on deglaciation. Rather, very modest changes in the disposition of the fresh water presently carried by the East Greenland Current can alter or stop the convection; and the principal source of fresh water is sea ice, rather than glacial ice. The essence of the present situation is that the large fresh-water output from the Arctic Ocean, which is the distillate of freezing, passes perilously close to the very weakly stratified convective gyres; and that the stratification in these gyres is easily perturbed, either by variations in the discharge from the Arctic Ocean or by leaks or recirculation from the boundary current.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
L.M. Seyler ◽  
E. Trembath-Reichert ◽  
B.J. Tully ◽  
J.A. Huber

AbstractThe rock-hosted oceanic crustal aquifer is one of the largest habitable volumes on Earth, and it harbors a reservoir of microbial life that influences global-scale biogeochemical cycles. Here, we use time series metagenomic and metatranscriptomic data from a low-temperature, ridge flank environment that is representative of the majority of global hydrothermal fluid circulation in the ocean to reconstruct microbial metabolic potential, transcript abundance, and community dynamics. The data suggest that the microbial community in this subseafloor habitat is motile, chiefly heterotrophic or mixotrophic, and capable of using alternative electron acceptors such as nitrate and thiosulfate, in addition to oxygen. Anaerobic processes are most abundant in subseafloor horizons deepest in the aquifer, furthest from connectivity with the deep ocean, and there was little overlap in the active microbial populations between sampling horizons. Together, our results indicate the microbial community in the North Pond aquifer plays an important role in the oxidation of organic carbon within the crust, and is also metabolically flexible, with the ability to switch from autotrophy to heterotrophy, as well as function under low oxygen conditions. This work highlights the heterogeneity of microbial life in the subseafloor aquifer and provides new insights into biogeochemical cycling in ocean crust.


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