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Details of Award

NERC Reference : NE/M017826/2

The large-scale oceanic distribution of trace elements: disentangling preformed contributions, regenerative processes, subsurface sources and sinks

Fellowship Award

Fellow:
Dr Y Plancherel, Imperial College London, Grantham Institute for Climate Change
Science Area:
Marine
Atmospheric
Freshwater
Overall Classification:
Panel C
ENRIs:
Natural Resource Management
Pollution and Waste
Environmental Risks and Hazards
Biodiversity
Global Change
Science Topics:
Climate & Climate Change
Earth Resources
Ocean Circulation
Ecosystem Scale Processes
Biogeochemical Cycles
Abstract:
Elements present in seawater in quantities so small that they do not affect salinity are called "trace elements". In spite of their low abundances, trace metals can play disproportionally large roles in controlling the dynamics of marine ecosystems. This is because some are necessary for the proper functioning of important enzymes and proteins and must thus be supplied in sufficient quantities to maintain phytoplankton populations. There are regions in the ocean where key metals, particularly iron (Fe), are lacking in proportion to the other nutrients, what limits biological productivity. Why some micronutrients are lacking in some region and not others is not fully understood; the processes that govern the natural cycles of these metals are not well known. This gap in understanding is partly due to the difficulty of measuring trace metals in the ocean: trace metals are present in very small quantities and water samples are taken from metallic research ships, making measurements prone to contamination. Reliable techniques to routinely measure trace metals in seawater have only been recently developed. Thanks to them, the accuracy of the data and data coverage over the oceans have improved dramatically over the last few years. With this project, I aim to improve the general understanding of the cycling of trace metals, particularly the micronutrients, by analyzing the newest and most complete trace metal databases available. The difficulty when trying to interpret measurements of dissolved trace metal concentrations, or other nutrients, in the deep sea is that one cannot easily distinguish between the amount that is present because it has been transported to the point of sampling from somewhere else and the amount that has been added or removed due to local, internal processes. Yet, one must be able to isolate that later component to quantify and interpret the influence of subsurface biogeochemical processes on trace metal cycles. Without this ability, one's interpretation of the measured concentration field could be wrong, mistaking transport phenomena for internal cycling mechanisms. This work will directly address this issue by applying statistical deconvolution techniques to explicitly quantify the amount that is transported. By taking the difference between the measured concentrations and the calculated transported component, it is possible to quantify the fraction that is due to biogeochemical processes and map these residual quantities. One of the most important processes influencing the distribution of trace metals in the sea is "scavenging"; that is the propensity for dissolved metals to stick to particles and sink along with them. Scavenging affects metals more than other nutrients. It is an important process because it is omnipresent (particles are everywhere) and can redistribute the metals within the ocean interior. It is hypothesized that if scavenging is strong, or operating for a long time, the scavenging process can fractionate metals relative to the other nutrients. When layers that are affected strongly by this process are transported back to the surface, they will bring with them waters that are depleted in the metal relative to the other nutrients. If the metal abundance is too low, this will limit surface productivity. Preliminary modeling experiments support the view that scavenging exerts a first order control on the distribution of some metals, such as thorium, beryllium, the rare earth elements and aluminium. It is, however, not clear how much micronutrient metals scavenge and if this effect is able to explain the distribution and characteristics of micronutrient-limited regions. This project will test this hypothesis. First, the statistical deconvolution results from the data will inform on the degree of fractionation imposed by scavenging on each metal. Secondly, models will be used to simulate scavenging and the fractionation process and quantify the influence on surface ecosystems.
Period of Award:
1 Jul 2018 - 31 Dec 2020
Value:
£196,895
Authorised funds only
NERC Reference:
NE/M017826/2
Grant Stage:
Completed
Scheme:
Research Fellowship
Grant Status:
Closed
Programme:
IRF

This fellowship award has a total value of £196,895  

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FDAB - Financial Details (Award breakdown by headings)

DI - Other CostsIndirect - Indirect CostsDA - Estate CostsDI - StaffDA - Other Directly AllocatedDI - T&S
£9,363£65,605£25,134£81,620£872£14,302

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