Title of article :
Atmospheric deposition of N, P and Fe to the Northern Indian Ocean: Implications to C- and N-fixation Original Research Article
Author/Authors :
Bikkina Srinivas، نويسنده , , M.M. Sarin، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
دوهفته نامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2013
Pages :
11
From page :
104
To page :
114
Abstract :
This study presents the first data set on atmospheric input of N, P and Fe to the Northern Indian Ocean. Based on the chemical analysis of ambient aerosols, collected from the marine atmospheric boundary layer (MABL) during the continental outflow (January–April), we document that dry-deposition fluxes (μmol m− 2 d− 1) of N (2–167), P (0.5–4.8) and Fe (0.02–1.2) to the Bay of Bengal are significantly higher compared to those over the Arabian Sea [N: 0.2–18.6; P: 0.3–0.9; Fe: 0.001–0.015]. Using atmospherically derived P and Fe, C-fixation (1.1 Pg yr− 1) in the Bay of Bengal is dominated by anthropogenic sources. In contrast, C-fixation (0.03 Pg yr− 1) in the Arabian Sea is limited by P and Fe. This is attributed to the poor fractional solubility of atmospheric mineral dust transported to the Arabian Sea. However, N-fixation by diazotrophs in the two oceanic regions is somewhat similar (0.5 Tg yr− 1). Our estimate of N-deposition (0.2 Tg yr− 1) to the Northern Indian Ocean is significantly lower compared to model results (~ 800–1200 mg-N m− 2 yr− 1 ≈ 5.7–8.6 Tg yr− 1 by ; ~ 4.1 Tg yr− 1 by ; ~ 0.8 Tg yr− 1 by ). An overestimate of N-deposition by models could arise due to inappropriate parameterization of temporal variability associated with the continental outflow spread over only four months.
Keywords :
N-fixation , Ocean surface biogeochemistry , Arabian Sea , Bay of Bengal , Air–sea deposition of nutrients , C-fixation
Journal title :
Science of the Total Environment
Serial Year :
2013
Journal title :
Science of the Total Environment
Record number :
989141
Link To Document :
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