New insights on the role of organic speciation in the biogeochemical cycle of dissolved cobalt in the southeastern Atlantic and the Southern Ocean

Type Article
Date 2012
Language English
Author(s) Bown J.1, Boye Marie1, Nelson D. M.1
Affiliation(s) 1 : Inst Univ Europeen Mer IUEM, UMS3113, Lab Sci Environm Marin, UMR6539, F-29280 Plouzane, France.
Source Biogeosciences (1726-4170) (Copernicus Gesellschaft Mbh), 2012 , Vol. 9 , N. 7 , P. 2719-2736
DOI 10.5194/bg-9-2719-2012
WOS© Times Cited 24
Note The BONUS-GoodHope IPY project: dynamics and biogeochemistry interactions in the Southern Ocean south off Africa Editor(s): S. Speich, F. Dehairs, M.-A. Sicre, A. V. Borges, and M. Hoppema Special issue jointly organized between Ocean Science and Biogeosciences
Abstract The organic speciation of dissolved cobalt (DCo) was investigated in the subtropical region of the southeastern Atlantic, and in the Southern Ocean in the Antarctic Circumpolar Current (ACC) and the northern Weddell Gyre, between 34A degrees 25A ' S and 57A degrees 33A ' S along the Greenwich Meridian during the austral summer of 2008. The organic speciation of dissolved cobalt was determined by competing ligand exchange adsorptive cathodic stripping voltammetry (CLE-AdCSV) using nioxime as a competing ligand. The concentrations of the organic ligands (L) ranged between 26 and 73 pM, and the conditional stability constants (log K'(CoL)) of the organic complexes of Co between 17.9 and 20.1. Most dissolved cobalt was organically complexed in the water-column (60 to > 99.9%). There were clear vertical and meridional patterns in the distribution of L and the organic speciation of DCo along the section. These patterns suggest a biological source of the organic ligands in the surface waters of the subtropical domain and northern subantarctic region, potentially driven by the cyanobacteria, and a removal of the organic Co by direct or indirect biological uptake. The highest L:DCo ratio (5.81 +/- 1.07 pM pM(-1)) observed in these surface waters reflected the combined effects of ligand production and DCo consumption. As a result of these combined effects, the calculated concentrations of inorganic Co ([Co']) were very low in the subtropical and subantarctic surface waters, generally between 10(-19) and 10(-17) M. In intermediate and deep waters, the South African margins can be a source of organic ligands, as it was suggested to be for DCo (Bown et al., 2011), although a significant portion of DCo (up to 15%) can be stabilized and transported as inorganic species in those DCo-enriched water-masses. Contrastingly, the distribution of L does not suggest an intense biological production of L around the Antarctic Polar Front where a diatom bloom had recently occurred. Here [Co'] can be several orders of magnitude higher than those reported in the subtropical domain, suggesting that cobalt limitation was unlikely in the ACC domain. The almost invariant L:DCo ratio of similar to 1 recorded in these surface waters also reflected the conservative behaviours of both L and DCo. In deeper waters higher ligand concentrations were observed in waters previously identified as DCo sources (Bown et al., 2011). At those depths the eastward increase of DCo from the Drake Passage to the Greenwich Meridian could be associated with a large scale transport and remineralisation of DCo as organic complexes; here, the fraction stabilized as inorganic Co was also significant (up to 25%) in the low oxygenated Upper Circumpolar Deep Waters. Organic speciation may thus be a central factor in the biogeochemical cycle of DCo in those areas, playing a major role in the bioavailability and the geochemistry of Co.
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