Authors
Philip W Boyd, Timothy Jickells, Cliff S Law, Stéphane Blain, Edward A Boyle, Ken O Buesseler, Kenneth H Coale, JJ Cullen, Hein JW De Baar, Michael Follows, M Harvey, Christiane Lancelot, M Levasseur, NPJ Owens, R Pollard, RB Rivkin, J Sarmiento, Véronique Schoemann, Victor Smetacek, S Takeda, A Tsuda, Stuart Turner, AJ Watson
Publication date
2007/2/2
Source
science
Volume
315
Issue
5812
Pages
612-617
Publisher
American Association for the Advancement of Science
Description
Since the mid-1980s, our understanding of nutrient limitation of oceanic primary production has radically changed. Mesoscale iron addition experiments (FeAXs) have unequivocally shown that iron supply limits production in one-third of the world ocean, where surface macronutrient concentrations are perennially high. The findings of these 12 FeAXs also reveal that iron supply exerts controls on the dynamics of plankton blooms, which in turn affect the biogeochemical cycles of carbon, nitrogen, silicon, and sulfur and ultimately influence the Earth climate system. However, extrapolation of the key results of FeAXs to regional and seasonal scales in some cases is limited because of differing modes of iron supply in FeAXs and in the modern and paleo-oceans. New research directions include quantification of the coupling of oceanic iron and carbon biogeochemistry.
Total citations
200720082009201020112012201320142015201620172018201920202021202220232024279586779810798109116937587898389828958
Scholar articles