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Earth, wind, fire, and pollution: aerosol nutrient sources and impacts on ocean biogeochemistry
Hamilton, D.S.; Perron, M.M.G.; Bond, T.C.; Bowie, A.R.; Buchholz, R.R.; Guieu, C.; Ito, A.; Maenhaut, W.; Myriokefalitakis, S.; Olgun, N.; Rathod, S.D.; Schepanski, K.; Tagliabue, A.; Wagner, R.; Mahowald, N.M. (2022). Earth, wind, fire, and pollution: aerosol nutrient sources and impacts on ocean biogeochemistry. Ann. Rev. Mar. Sci. 14: 303-330. https://dx.doi.org/10.1146/annurev-marine-031921-013612
In: Annual Review of Marine Science. Annual Reviews: Palo Alto, Calif. ISSN 1941-1405; e-ISSN 1941-0611, more
Peer reviewed article  

Available in  Authors 

Keyword
    Marine/Coastal
Author keywords
    mineral dust, fires, volcanoes, phosphate, soluble iron, ocean biogeochemistry

Authors  Top 
  • Hamilton, D.S.
  • Perron, M.M.G.
  • Bond, T.C.
  • Bowie, A.R.
  • Buchholz, R.R.
  • Guieu, C.
  • Ito, A.
  • Maenhaut, W., more
  • Myriokefalitakis, S.
  • Olgun, N.
  • Rathod, S.D.
  • Schepanski, K.
  • Tagliabue, A.
  • Wagner, R.
  • Mahowald, N.M.

Abstract
    A key Earth system science question is the role of atmospheric deposition in supplying vital nutrients to the phytoplankton that form the base of marine food webs. Industrial and vehicular pollution, wildfires, volcanoes, biogenic debris, and desert dust all carry nutrients within their plumes throughout the globe. In remote ocean ecosystems, aerosol deposition represents an essential new source of nutrients for primary production. The large spatiotemporal variability in aerosols from myriad sources combined with the differential responses of marine biota to changing fluxes makes it crucially important to understand where, when, and how much nutrients from the atmosphere enter marine ecosystems. This review brings together existing literature, experimental evidence of impacts, and new atmospheric nutrient observations that can be compared with atmospheric and ocean biogeochemistry modeling. We evaluate the contribution and spatiotemporal variability of nutrient-bearing aerosols from desert dust, wildfire, volcanic, and anthropogenic sources, including the organic component, deposition fluxes, and oceanic impacts.

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