Authors
Charlotte Kleint, Stefan Kuzmanovski, Zach Powell, Solveig I Bühring, Sylvia G Sander, Andrea Koschinsky
Publication date
2015/7/20
Journal
Marine Chemistry
Volume
173
Pages
244-252
Publisher
Elsevier
Description
Hydrothermal vents at the seafloor release large volumes of metal-rich fluids into the ocean. Some of these metals are biologically essential (such as Fe), while others may be toxic (e.g. Cu). Organisms living at these habitats produce small organic molecules, ligands that are able to form complexes with different metals, to either enhance their bioavailability or to decrease their toxicity. While some deep-sea vents have been studied with respect to metal complexation, comparable studies at shallow marine hydrothermal vent systems are rather rare. In this study, total dissolved Cu concentrations ([Cu]T) and corresponding Cu binding ligand concentrations ([L]Cu) at the shallow water hydrothermal vent fields off the coast of Milos (Greece), Dominica (Lesser Antilles) and the Bay of Plenty (New Zealand) were examined by a voltammetric ligand titration, using competitive ligand equilibration–adsorptive stripping …
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