Chemical Geology | 2019

Zinc and nickel isotopes in seawater from the Indian Sector of the Southern Ocean: The impact of natural iron fertilization versus Southern Ocean hydrography and biogeochemistry

 
 
 
 

Abstract


Abstract The Southern Ocean is the site of 20% of global ocean carbon export, and the origin of water masses that significantly impact the chemistry of the global ocean. Much of the Southern Ocean is a high nutrient low chlorophyll (HNLC) region. Iron is the primary limiting nutrient for phytoplankton growth, and may also be an important control on the biogeochemistry of the water masses emanating from the Southern Ocean. Here we investigate the response of Zn and Ni and their isotopes to natural Fe fertilization from Southern Ocean islands, using samples collected during the KEOPS-2 (Oct–Nov 2011) program in the early austral spring near the Kerguelen plateau, Indian Sector of the Southern Ocean. Zinc and Ni concentrations show depth distributions and relationships to major nutrients that are very similar to published data from the Atlantic sector of the Southern Ocean, away from island fertilization. As in the Atlantic sector, and other regions outside the Southern Ocean, there is a slight minimum in δ66Zn at about 100–150\u202fm depth and a slightly heavier value at the surface. At the KEOPS-2 sites, the light sub-surface Zn isotopes occur at the depth level where measured chl-a has declined to near zero. The heaviest Zn isotope values in either the Atlantic or Indian sectors occur in bottom waters, are associated with samples that show high dissolved Si relative to Zn. These latter represent possible evidence for a heavy input directly to deep water or from sediment, and the Zn-Si-δ66Zn systematics are consistent with a source in diatom opal. Nickel concentrations show much less variation than those of Zn, with the most depleted surface value only 15–20% lower than those in upwelled deep water in the Southern Ocean. These small variations in Ni concentration are associated with no significant variability in Ni isotopes, as also previously observed in the Atlantic sector. Overall, the key feature of the dataset is the apparent absence of any significant impact of natural Fe fertilization on the distribution of Zn and Ni, with the dominant control being the station location relative to the Polar Front in both the Atlantic and Indian sectors. Zinc and Ni isotopes are invariant in surface waters, whether inside or outside the fertilized zone and whether south or north of the Polar Front. This article is part of a special issue entitled: “Cycles of trace elements and isotopes in the ocean – GEOTRACES and beyond” - edited by Tim M. Conway, Tristan Horner, Yves Plancherel, and Aridane G. Gonzalez.

Volume 511
Pages 452-464
DOI 10.1016/J.CHEMGEO.2018.09.010
Language English
Journal Chemical Geology

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