Marine biogenic source of atmospheric organic nitrogen in the subtropical North Atlantic.

Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A

Department of Earth, Environmental and Planetary Sciences and Institute at Brown for Environment and Society, Brown University, Providence, RI 02912.

Published: January 2016

AI Article Synopsis

  • Global models suggest that human activities account for about one-third of nitrogen deposition to oceans and 10% of CO2 uptake, but there’s limited observational data to support these estimates.
  • A study conducted in Bermuda over 18 months found that organic nitrogen (WSON) in marine aerosols is closely linked to ocean productivity and wind speed, indicating a natural marine source rather than an anthropogenic one.
  • The research shows that the composition of organic nitrogen in rain differs from that in aerosols, implying that rain nitrogen largely comes from in-cloud scavenging; overall, only 27% of total nitrogen deposition to oceans is anthropogenic, much lower than earlier estimates.

Article Abstract

Global models estimate that the anthropogenic component of atmospheric nitrogen (N) deposition to the ocean accounts for up to a third of the ocean's external N supply and 10% of anthropogenic CO2 uptake. However, there are few observational constraints from the marine atmospheric environment to validate these findings. Due to the paucity of atmospheric organic N data, the largest uncertainties related to atmospheric N deposition are the sources and cycling of organic N, which is 20-80% of total N deposition. We studied the concentration and chemical composition of rainwater and aerosol organic N collected on the island of Bermuda in the western North Atlantic Ocean over 18 mo. Here, we show that the water-soluble organic N concentration ([WSON]) in marine aerosol is strongly correlated with surface ocean primary productivity and wind speed, suggesting a marine biogenic source for aerosol WSON. The chemical composition of high-[WSON] aerosols also indicates a primary marine source. We find that the WSON in marine rain is compositionally different from that in concurrently collected aerosols, suggesting that in-cloud scavenging (as opposed to below-cloud "washout") is the main contributor to rain WSON. We conclude that anthropogenic activity is not a significant source of organic N to the marine atmosphere over the North Atlantic, despite downwind transport from large pollution sources in North America. This, in conjunction with previous work on ammonium and nitrate, leads to the conclusion that only 27% of total N deposition to the global ocean is anthropogenic, in contrast to the 80% estimated previously.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4743774PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1516847113DOI Listing

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