https://agupubs.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1029/2025GL118622

*Authors: *U. A. Jongebloed, T. P. Fischer, P. R. Kyle, L. Kang, Y. A.
Bhatti, B. Alexander

First published: *22 January 2026*

https://doi.org/10.1029/2025GL118622

*Abstract*
The Southern Ocean has emerged as a key region for constraining
aerosol-climate interactions due to its relatively low anthropogenic
influence. Sulfate is an important aerosol over the Southern Ocean, and
models suggest dimethyl sulfide (DMS) is the largest source of sulfate
during summer. However, sulfur isotopes of sulfate (δ34S(SO42−)) in
Antarctic ice cores suggest a significant contribution from a previously
unexplained non-DMS source. Here we show that the fractional contribution
from passive volcanic degassing (fvolc) explains observed δ34S(SO42−), and
that a global chemical transport model underestimates fvolc across
Antarctica. Underestimated fvolc implies that the model mischaracterizes
sulfate sources in this important region. The discrepancy between observed
and modeled sulfate sources can be reconciled by increasing passive
volcanic sulfur degassing emissions and decreasing DMS emissions. Our
results imply that current biases in emissions inventories could bias
assessments of aerosol-cloud interactions in the Southern Ocean region and
globally.

*Plain Language Summary*
Sulfate aerosols are small particles in the atmosphere that have a cooling
effect on global climate. The Southern Ocean, which encircles Antarctica,
is of great interest to climate scientists because this pristine region
shows how aerosols interact with clouds in conditions largely unaffected by
anthropogenic pollution. We examine sulfate in Antarctic ice cores to
determine how much each source of sulfur contributes to sulfate aerosols in
the atmosphere. Possible sulfate sources are volcanic gas emissions, marine
plankton, and other minor sources. By comparing our ice core constraints to
a state-of-the-art global model, we find that the model both underestimates
sulfur emissions from passive (i.e., non-eruptive) volcanic degassing while
overestimating sulfur emissions from plankton. These biases are important
because sulfur emissions strongly influence how climate models simulate and
project future climate.

*Key Points*
Sulfur isotopes in ice cores quantify how much sulfate over the Southern
Ocean comes from passive volcanic degassing versus phytoplankton

A global chemical transport model underestimates the volcanic fraction of
sulfate observed in the southern high latitudes

Increasing passive volcanic degassing and decreasing Southern Ocean DMS
emissions corrects the discrepancy and constrains model bias

*Source: AGU*

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