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A new source of dimethylsulfide (DMS) for the arctic atmosphere: ice diatoms
Authors:M Levasseur  M Gosselin  S Michaud
Institution:(1) Institut Maurice-Lamontagne, Ministère des Pêches et des Océans, C.P. 1000, G5H 3Z4 Mont-Joli, Québec, Canada;(2) Département d'océanographie, Université du Québec à Rimouski, 300, Allée des Ursulines, G5L 3A1 Rimouski, Québec, Canada
Abstract:We report the first evidence that pennate diatoms growing within the bottom layer of first-year ice in the Arctic produce significant amounts of particulate dimethylsulfoniopropionate (DMSPp) and dissolved DMSP+DMS. In 1992 in Resolute Passage, a tributary of Barrow Strait, DMSPp concentrations within the bottom layer of ice reached 1055 mg S m-3 at the end of the vernal bloom, a value one order of magnitude higher than the maximum value reported in antarctic ice. Bottom-ice concentrations in DMSPp and DMSPd+DMS were significantly correlated with the abundance of the dominant pennate diatom Nitzschia frigida. Intracellular concentration in DMSP of ice algae was very low (0.001 pg cell-1) at the end of April when algae were light-limited and reached 1.17 pg cell-1 in mid-May following an increase in light and algal growth. We calculate that the rapid release of the dissolved DMSP+DMS from the ice into surface waters following the ice break-up will generate a sea-to-air DMS flux of 0.7 mg S m-2 d-1, a pulse ten times higher than the mean arctic summer flux. We estimate that this 1-d pulse represents up to 5% of the annual DMS emission in the Arctic.
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