Poster's note : a potential negative feedback relevant to OIF modelling and
research

http://www.nature.com/ngeo/journal/vaop/ncurrent/full/ngeo2633.html

Enhanced Southern Ocean marine productivity due to fertilization by giant
icebergs
Luis P. A. M. Duprat, Grant R. Bigg & David J. Wilton

Nature Geoscience (2016)
doi:10.1038/ngeo2633
 11 January 2016

Primary productivity is enhanced within a few kilometres of icebergs in the
Weddell Sea owing to the input of terrigeneous nutrients and trace elements
during iceberg melting. However, the influence of giant icebergs, over 18
km in length, on marine primary production in the Southern Ocean is less
well studied. Here we present an analysis of 175 satellite images of open
ocean colour before and after the passage of 17 giant icebergs between 2003
and 2013. We detect substantially enhanced chlorophyll levels, typically
over a radius of at least 4–10 times the iceberg’s length, that can persist
for more than a month following passage of a giant iceberg. This area of
influence is more than an order of magnitude larger than that found for
sub-kilometre scale icebergs or in ship-based surveys of giant icebergs.
Assuming that carbon export increases by a factor of 5–10 over the area of
influence, we estimate that up to a fifth of the Southern Ocean’s downward
carbon flux originates with giant iceberg fertilization. We suggest that,
if giant iceberg calving increases this century as expected, this negative
feedback on the carbon cycle may become more important.

Subject terms:
Biogeochemistry
Biooceanography
Marine biology
Marine chemistry

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