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Greenland's summer ocean bloom likely fueled by iron
by Staff Writers
Stanford CA (SPX) Jul 07, 2017


Satellite photo of glacial meltwater runoff from the Greenland Ice Sheet

Iron particles catching a ride on glacial meltwater washed out to sea by drifting currents is likely fueling a recently discovered summer algal bloom off the southern coast of Greenland, according to a new study.

Microalgae, also known as phytoplankton, are plant-like, marine microorganisms that form the base of the food web in many parts of the ocean. "Phytoplankton serve as food for all of the fish and animals that live there. Everything that eats is eating them ultimately," said Kevin Arrigo, a biological oceanographer and the Donald and Donald M. Steel Professor at Stanford's School of Earth, Energy and Environmental Sciences.

Greenland's summer phytoplankton bloom had gone largely unnoticed until just recently, despite the fact that it blankets 200,000 square miles and turns the waters of much of the Labrador Sea turquoise.

"It's one of those places where people just don't sample very much," Arrigo said. "We have satellite images of this region going back years, but almost nobody's looked at this particular spot during the summer."

After learning about the summer bloom a few years ago, Arrigo and his team set out to discover what might be fueling it. Marine biologists have long known that the primary driver of Greenland's spring bloom is sunlight.

In high-latitude regions where the temperature plummets in winter, the ocean's water column gets mixed as cooling surface water sinks to the seafloor and benthic nutrients such as nitrogen, phosphorus, and iron are dredged to the top. "When spring arrives, then you've got sunlight and nutrients - the two ingredients you need for a bloom to occur," Arrigo said.

However, this explanation doesn't account for the summer bloom. After all, by the time summer arrives in Greenland, sunlight has been plentiful for several months already, and the recently mixed water column is still rich in most nutrients.

To solve the mystery of what might be driving the summer bloom, Arrigo and his colleagues compared NASA satellite imagery of the summer bloom and results from computer models simulating Greenland's glacier melt and ocean currents. The team found a significant correlation between the outflow of freshwater from Greenland's melting glaciers and the timing of the bloom.

"The summer bloom develops about a week after the arrival of glacial meltwater in early July and persists until the input of glacial meltwater slows in August or September," said coauthor and Stanford scientist Gert van Dijken.

In a new study published in Geophysical Research Letters, the scientists hypothesize that it's not the influx of the meltwater itself that is triggering the summer bloom, but rather iron particles washed off from Greenland's rocks and soil and ferried into the sea by the meltwater.

"The waters around Greenland happen to be one of the rare iron-limited places on Earth," Arrigo said. "A lot of the photosynthetic machinery of phytoplankton requires iron. If they don't have iron, they can't capture light and make food."

The summer meltwater influx is likely refreshing the iron supply in the Labrador Sea around Greenland after its been depleted by the spring bloom. "All the pieces fit together," Arrigo said. "The fact that when the runoff comes, the bloom starts. The runoff likely carries lots of iron with it."

If iron-rich meltwater is indeed what's spurring the summer bloom, then the region's biological productivity could rise in the decades to come as climate change causes Greenland's glaciers to melt earlier in the year. "It may be that a much larger fraction of the northern Labrador Sea could become a lot more productive in the summer than it's been," Arrigo said.

The scientists have already submitted grant proposals to the National Science Foundation to fund a summer research cruise to Greenland to test their hypothesis.

"We want to go there before the summer bloom starts to measure the concentration of nutrients, especially iron," Van Dijken said, "and then make the same measurements after the glacial meltwater arrives and the blooms start."

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On April 16, 2006, Jim Martell, a 65-year-old hunter from Idaho, was on a hunting trip on the southern tip of Banks Island in Canada's Northwest Territories when he shot and killed what would later turn out to be a half-polar bear, half-grizzly bear hybrid. The bear, featuring white fur pocked with brown patches, long claws, a humped back and a concave face, was the first evidence of a wild hy ... read more

Related Links
Stanford's School of Earth, Energy and Environmental Sciences
Beyond the Ice Age


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