http://www.the-scientist.com/?articles.view/articleNo/41564/title/Complexities-of-Carbon-Lowering/

Complexities of Carbon Lowering

Iron fertilization might be less efficient at storing carbon in the deep
ocean than previously reported.
By Joe Turner | December 2, 2014

In 2012, a large team of international scientists explained how algal
blooms consume atmospheric carbon, which they drag to the sea floor as they
sink and die. As The Scientist reported at the time, the results pointed to
iron fertilization as a potential geoengineering solution to rising carbon
dioxide (CO2) levels in the atmosphere. But a study published last month
(November 10) in Nature Geosciencecalled into question whether this
approach would be as effective a carbon sink as initially thought.

In it, Ian Salter from the Helmholtz Centre for Polar and Marine Research
in Germany and his colleagues report on differences among sea floor
sediment samples taken from within the Polar Frontal Zone around the Crozet
Islands near Antarctica. Comparing sediment from sites with and without
enhanced natural iron levels, the researchers found an increase in calcium
carbonate in the iron-enriched samples, suggesting a more complex
ecological response.

This latest work “demonstrates that natural iron fertilization stimulates
sinking of calcium carbonate in particles from the upper ocean to the deep
ocean,” oceanographer Dorothee Bakker of the University of East Anglia,
U.K., who has worked on the Surface Ocean CO2 Atlas but was not involved in
the present study, told The Scientist in an e-mail.Salter explained that
while increases in iron are known to stimulate the growth of phytoplankon
algae, which fix carbon by photosynthesis, iron can also lead to increased
growth of of other tiny organisms. For example, floating amoeba species
called formainifer have calcium carbonate shells and feed on these
carbon-fixing algae. Over the long term, the chemical reaction that
produces formainifer shells releases carbon dioxide from surface waters to
the atmosphere. Therefore, the total amount of carbon fixed depends on the
balance of carbon taken up by the algae and released by the calcifying
organisms.

Considering these calcifying organisms, “we ran some calculations to
estimate the net transfer of carbon and found that it was up to 30 percent
lower,” Salter wrote in an e-mail. “However, it is important to be aware
that our results are from a naturally occurring iron fertilized bloom, not
an artificially created one,” he added. “Since our findings are dependent
on ecosystem structure at a particular study site, it is likely that
similar studies in other environments would yield different results.”Bakker
agreed that there could be some variation in the impact of the calcifying
organisms with latitude. “This would have implications for artificial iron
fertilization,” she noted.

Adam Martiny, an associate professor of Earth system science, ecology, and
evolutionary biology the University of California, Irvine, who was not
involved with the work, noted that previous studies examining artificial
iron fertilization were limited and uncovered only short-term effects,
whereas this study compared natural systems.

This latest study “demonstrates how important it is to account for the
response of different phytoplankton lineages to environmental change if we
want to fully understand how a future ocean will be affected by changes in
climate,” Martiny told The Scientist in an e-mail.

Worries about the potential effects of iron fertilization led the United
Nations’s International Maritime Organization (IMO) in 2008 to agree to a
moratorium on widespread iron fertilization of the oceans—among other
agreements that set the stage for research.

“This work reveals the complexity of ocean ecosystem responses to
fertilization, with those responses expected to vary regionally and
seasonally,” Tom Trull from the University of Tasmania’s Antarctic Climate
and Ecosystems Cooperative Research Centre in Australia who was not
involved in the work told The Scientist in an e-mail. “This emphasizes the
value of maintaining the IMO moratorium on fertilization for the purposes
of carbon sink enhancement, and simultaneously pushing ahead with further
research.”The overall impact of iron fertilization on oceanic carbon
storage remains unclear. Even so, said Martiny, “I still expect that
increases in the iron supply to areas like the Southern Ocean will increase
the biological pump and removal of CO2from the atmosphere.

”I. Salter et al. “Carbonate counter pump stimulated by natural iron
fertilization in the Polar Frontal Zone,” Nature Geoscience,
doi:10.1038/NGEO2285, 2014.Correction (December 17): This article has been
updated to reflect that the 2008 agreement mentioned within pertained to
research involving ocean fertilization.

Tags

phytoplankton, oceanography, ocean, carbon fixation, atmospheric
science, atmosphere, algal blooms and algae

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