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Leaching material from Antarctic seaweeds and penguin guano affects cloud-relevant aerosol production

Authors :
Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovación (España)
National Centre for Atmospheric Science (UK)
Natural Environment Research Council (UK)
German Research Foundation
Agencia Estatal de Investigación (España)
Dall'Osto, Manuel
Sotomayor García, Ana
Cabrera-Brufau, Miguel
Berdalet, Elisa
Vaqué, Dolors
Zeppenfeld, Sebastian
Pinxteren, Manuela van
Herrmann, Hartmut
Wex, Heike
Rinaldi, Matteo
Paglione, Marco
Beddows, D.C.S.
Harrison, Roy M.
Àvila, Conxita
Martín-Martín, Rafael P.
Park, Jiyeon
Barbosa, Andrés
Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovación (España)
National Centre for Atmospheric Science (UK)
Natural Environment Research Council (UK)
German Research Foundation
Agencia Estatal de Investigación (España)
Dall'Osto, Manuel
Sotomayor García, Ana
Cabrera-Brufau, Miguel
Berdalet, Elisa
Vaqué, Dolors
Zeppenfeld, Sebastian
Pinxteren, Manuela van
Herrmann, Hartmut
Wex, Heike
Rinaldi, Matteo
Paglione, Marco
Beddows, D.C.S.
Harrison, Roy M.
Àvila, Conxita
Martín-Martín, Rafael P.
Park, Jiyeon
Barbosa, Andrés
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Within the Southern Ocean, the greatest warming is occurring on the Antarctic Peninsula (AP) where clear cryospheric and biological consequences are being observed. Antarctic coastal systems harbour a high diversity of marine and terrestrial ecosystems heavily influenced by Antarctic seaweeds (benthonic macroalgae) and bird colonies (mainly penguins). Primary sea spray aerosols (SSA) formed by the outburst of bubbles via the sea-surface microlayer depend on the organic composition of the sea water surface. In order to gain insight into the influence of ocean biology and bio-geochemistry on atmospheric aerosol, we performed in situ laboratory aerosol bubble chamber experiments to study the effect of different leachates of biogenic material - obtained from common Antarctic seaweeds as well as penguin guano - on primary SSA. The addition of different leachate materials on a seawater sample showed a dichotomous effect depending on the leachate material added - either suppressing (up to 52%) or enhancing (22–88%) aerosol particle production. We found high ice nucleating particle number concentrations resulting from addition of guano leachate material. Given the evolution of upper marine polar coastal ecosystems in the AP, further studies on ocean-atmosphere coupling are needed in order to represent the currently poorly understood climate feedback processes.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1333186538
Document Type :
Electronic Resource