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Role of sea ice in global biogeochemical cycles: emerging views and challenges

Role of sea ice in global biogeochemical cycles: emerging views and challenges
Role of sea ice in global biogeochemical cycles: emerging views and challenges
Observations from the last decade suggest an important role of sea ice in the global biogeochemical cycles, promoted by (i) active biological and chemical processes within the sea ice; (ii) fluid and gas exchanges at the sea ice interface through an often permeable sea ice cover; and (iii) tight physical, biological and chemical interactions between the sea ice, the ocean and the atmosphere. Photosynthetic micro-organisms in sea ice thrive in liquid brine inclusions encased in a pure ice matrix, where they find suitable light and nutrient levels. They extend the production season, provide a winter and early spring food source, and contribute to organic carbon export to depth. Under-ice and ice edge phytoplankton blooms occur when ice retreats, favoured by increasing light, stratification, and by the release of material into the water column. In particular, the release of iron – highly concentrated in sea ice – could have large effects in the iron-limited Southern Ocean. The export of inorganic carbon transport by brine sinking below the mixed layer, calcium carbonate precipitation in sea ice, as well as active ice-atmosphere carbon dioxide (CO2) fluxes, could play a central role in the marine carbon cycle. Sea ice processes could also significantly contribute to the sulphur cycle through the large production by ice algae of dimethylsulfoniopropionate (DMSP), the precursor of sulphate aerosols, which as cloud condensation nuclei have a potential cooling effect on the planet. Finally, the sea ice zone supports significant ocean–atmosphere methane (CH4) fluxes, while saline ice surfaces activate springtime atmospheric bromine chemistry, setting ground for tropospheric ozone depletion events observed near both poles. All these mechanisms are generally known, but neither precisely understood nor quantified at large scales. As polar regions are rapidly changing, understanding the large-scale polar marine biogeochemical processes and their future evolution is of high priority. Earth system models should in this context prove essential, but they currently represent sea ice as biologically and chemically inert. Palaeoclimatic proxies are also relevant, in particular the sea ice proxies, inferring past sea ice conditions from glacial and marine sediment core records and providing analogues for future changes. Being highly constrained by marine biogeochemistry, sea ice proxies would not only contribute to but also benefit from a better understanding of polar marine biogeochemical cycles.
0277-3791
207-230
Vancoppenolle, Martin
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Meiners, Klaus M.
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Michel, Christine
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Bopp, Laurent
771de655-3caf-42ba-8231-40f17d4addc4
Brabant, Frédéric
121dca48-ed51-4067-a4fc-827240c6a172
Carnat, Gauthier
5547ddd8-9517-4c04-a1dc-7ea6015b53b5
Delille, Bruno
19cc864a-b3e3-4fe3-a756-a10246f5d7f7
Lannuzel, Delphine
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Madec, Gurvan
ffb28deb-4bbd-4a4c-914f-492f813e4864
Moreau, Sébastien
92e48def-950b-497d-b1c7-bd1fe5da8894
Tison, Jean-Louis
73fc2c24-7d6e-4e2c-9e38-118a44cba6e1
van der Merwe, Pier
8d84d48b-c959-4f37-977f-b661dd44aac6
Vancoppenolle, Martin
c48d03ee-16ea-4e82-9119-c38d79093714
Meiners, Klaus M.
64e59013-6e42-4797-b5e6-5a543c521934
Michel, Christine
28783487-2c3b-46d1-89b8-f98ef3300998
Bopp, Laurent
771de655-3caf-42ba-8231-40f17d4addc4
Brabant, Frédéric
121dca48-ed51-4067-a4fc-827240c6a172
Carnat, Gauthier
5547ddd8-9517-4c04-a1dc-7ea6015b53b5
Delille, Bruno
19cc864a-b3e3-4fe3-a756-a10246f5d7f7
Lannuzel, Delphine
20a53a4c-fb9a-42b7-b7d7-c32cf83da979
Madec, Gurvan
ffb28deb-4bbd-4a4c-914f-492f813e4864
Moreau, Sébastien
92e48def-950b-497d-b1c7-bd1fe5da8894
Tison, Jean-Louis
73fc2c24-7d6e-4e2c-9e38-118a44cba6e1
van der Merwe, Pier
8d84d48b-c959-4f37-977f-b661dd44aac6

Vancoppenolle, Martin, Meiners, Klaus M., Michel, Christine, Bopp, Laurent, Brabant, Frédéric, Carnat, Gauthier, Delille, Bruno, Lannuzel, Delphine, Madec, Gurvan, Moreau, Sébastien, Tison, Jean-Louis and van der Merwe, Pier (2013) Role of sea ice in global biogeochemical cycles: emerging views and challenges. Quaternary Science Reviews, 79, 207-230. (doi:10.1016/j.quascirev.2013.04.011).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Observations from the last decade suggest an important role of sea ice in the global biogeochemical cycles, promoted by (i) active biological and chemical processes within the sea ice; (ii) fluid and gas exchanges at the sea ice interface through an often permeable sea ice cover; and (iii) tight physical, biological and chemical interactions between the sea ice, the ocean and the atmosphere. Photosynthetic micro-organisms in sea ice thrive in liquid brine inclusions encased in a pure ice matrix, where they find suitable light and nutrient levels. They extend the production season, provide a winter and early spring food source, and contribute to organic carbon export to depth. Under-ice and ice edge phytoplankton blooms occur when ice retreats, favoured by increasing light, stratification, and by the release of material into the water column. In particular, the release of iron – highly concentrated in sea ice – could have large effects in the iron-limited Southern Ocean. The export of inorganic carbon transport by brine sinking below the mixed layer, calcium carbonate precipitation in sea ice, as well as active ice-atmosphere carbon dioxide (CO2) fluxes, could play a central role in the marine carbon cycle. Sea ice processes could also significantly contribute to the sulphur cycle through the large production by ice algae of dimethylsulfoniopropionate (DMSP), the precursor of sulphate aerosols, which as cloud condensation nuclei have a potential cooling effect on the planet. Finally, the sea ice zone supports significant ocean–atmosphere methane (CH4) fluxes, while saline ice surfaces activate springtime atmospheric bromine chemistry, setting ground for tropospheric ozone depletion events observed near both poles. All these mechanisms are generally known, but neither precisely understood nor quantified at large scales. As polar regions are rapidly changing, understanding the large-scale polar marine biogeochemical processes and their future evolution is of high priority. Earth system models should in this context prove essential, but they currently represent sea ice as biologically and chemically inert. Palaeoclimatic proxies are also relevant, in particular the sea ice proxies, inferring past sea ice conditions from glacial and marine sediment core records and providing analogues for future changes. Being highly constrained by marine biogeochemistry, sea ice proxies would not only contribute to but also benefit from a better understanding of polar marine biogeochemical cycles.

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Published date: 1 November 2013
Organisations: Marine Systems Modelling

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Local EPrints ID: 362989
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/362989
ISSN: 0277-3791
PURE UUID: 7a94cb93-3fc3-44fe-ac4b-f6b01a7586fe

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Date deposited: 10 Mar 2014 15:53
Last modified: 14 Mar 2024 16:17

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Contributors

Author: Martin Vancoppenolle
Author: Klaus M. Meiners
Author: Christine Michel
Author: Laurent Bopp
Author: Frédéric Brabant
Author: Gauthier Carnat
Author: Bruno Delille
Author: Delphine Lannuzel
Author: Gurvan Madec
Author: Sébastien Moreau
Author: Jean-Louis Tison
Author: Pier van der Merwe

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