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Unravelling Surface Seawater DMS Concentration and Sea-To-Air Flux Changes After Sea Ice Retreat in the Western Arctic Ocean

Cited 2 time in wos
Cited 2 time in scopus
Title
Unravelling Surface Seawater DMS Concentration and Sea-To-Air Flux Changes After Sea Ice Retreat in the Western Arctic Ocean
Other Titles
서북극해의 해빙후퇴이후 표층 DMS의 농도와 플럭스 변동 연구
Authors
Zhang, Miming
Marandino, Christa A.
Yan, Jinpei
Wu, Yanfang
Park, Keyhong
Sun, Heng
Gao, Zhongyong
Xu, Suqing
Subject
Environmental Sciences & EcologyGeologyMeteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
Keywords
dimethylsulfideArctic Oceansea ice retreatchangessurface seawater
Issue Date
2021-06
Citation
Zhang, Miming, et al. 2021. "Unravelling Surface Seawater DMS Concentration and Sea-To-Air Flux Changes After Sea Ice Retreat in the Western Arctic Ocean". GLOBAL BIOGEOCHEMICAL CYCLES, 35(6): 1-15.
Abstract
The receding of the seasonal ice cover in the Arctic due to climate change has been predicted by models to increase climate-active biogenic trace gas emissions, specifically those of dimethylsulfide (DMS). However, insufficient DMS measurements are currently available to either support or refute this hypothesis and to fully understand the various responses of oceanic DMS in a rapidly changing Arctic Ocean environment. Here, we present high-resolution surface water DMS data collected in the summer of 2014 in combination with a suite of ancillary variables including sea ice cover, salinity, and nutrients. We show that surface seawater DMS concentrations, generally below 0.5 nmol L-1, remained unchanged in the Canada Basin after sea ice retreat probably due to insufficient nutrients supply to the upper mixed layer and resulting low primary production. Moreover, in the Chukchi shelf region, DMS concentrations decreased following a phytoplankton bloom due to the rapid depletion and slow resupply of nutrients. Although the DMS sea-to-air fluxes were not high from a global perspective, they increased by a factor of 4-fold after sea ice retreat in the Arctic Ocean high latitudes. This increase in DMS flux was mainly driven by increased wind speed. This work provides unique observations and insights on how surface seawater DMS and flux to the atmosphere may change in the future Arctic Ocean.
URI
https://repository.kopri.re.kr/handle/201206/13267
DOI
http://dx.doi.org/10.1029/2020GB006796
Type
Article
Station
해당사항없음
Indexed
SCIE
Appears in Collections  
2021-2021, Korea-Arctic Warming and Response of Ecosystem (21-21) / Yang, Eun Jin (PM21040)
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