Oceanic iron (Fe) fertilization experiments have advanced the understanding of how Fe regulates biological productivity and air-sea carbon dioxide (CO2) exchange. However, little is known about the production and consumption of halocarbons and other gases as a result of Fe addition. Besides metabolizing inorganic carbon, marine microorganisms produce and consume many other trace gases. Several of these gases, which individually impact global climate, stratospheric ozone concentration, or local photochemistry, have not been previously quantified during an Feenrichment experiment. We describe results for selected dissolved trace gases including methane (CH4), isoprene (C5H8), methyl bromide (CH 3Br), dimethyl sulfide, and oxygen (O2), which increased subsequent to Fe fertilization, and the associated decreases in concentrations of carbon monoxide (CO), methyl iodide (CH 3I), and CO 2 observed during the Southern Ocean Iron Enrichment Experiments. P revious iron (Fe) fertilization experiments have been conducted in the North (1) and equatorial Pacific (2, 3) and in the Southern Ocean (4, 5). The Southern Ocean, the largest of the high-nutrient low-chlorophyll regions, represents 6% of the global ocean and has the potential to enhance carbon sequestration by Fe fertilization (6-9), which could slow carbon dioxide (CO 2 ) accumulation in the atmosphere and potentially help alleviate global warming.
Experimental MethodsThe experimental design and other results of the Southern Ocean Iron Enrichment Experiment (SOFeX) are presented in an overview paper (8). Of the two regions fertilized with Fe during SOFeX, we focus here on the region north of the Antarctic Polar Front. An area Ϸ15 ϫ 15 km at 56.2°S, 172.0°W (southeast of New Zealand in the southwest Pacific sector of the Southern Ocean) was fertilized with a solution of acidified iron sulfate (FeSO 4 ) over 48 h to a concentration of Ϸ1.2 ϫ 10 Ϫ9 mol⅐liter Ϫ1 (1.2 nM) beginning on January 12, 2002. The background Fe concentration ([Fe]) was Ϸ0.1 nM. A second (36 h) application of FeSO 4 (Ϸ1.2 nM) ended on January 17. These Fe additions were intended to simulate glacial era concentrations of iron in the Southern Ocean (8, 10). The region, or patch, was allowed time to bloom and then was surveyed over a 50-h period, between February 8 and 10, 4 weeks after the first Fe application. By this time the patch had reached a surface area that was a factor of 10 larger than during the initial Fe addition with iron concentrations in the patch of Ϸ0.3 nM (8). During this survey we approached the patch from the South working our way northeast, while crisscrossing the patch. After the shape and orientation of the patch became apparent [elongated and stretching from the southwest to the northeast (11)], more intensive sampling began along the patch. Observations of fluorescence, the partial pressure of CO 2 in seawater (pCO 2 ) (Fig. 1A), dissolved O 2 (Fig. 1B), chlorophyll, and primary productivity indicated a pronounced change in biological activity in the mixed layer (upper 40-5...