Constraining global marine iron sources and ligand-mediated scavenging
fluxes with GEOTRACES dissolved iron measurements in an ocean
biogeochemical model
Abstract
Iron is a key micronutrient controlling phytoplankton growth in vast
regions of the global ocean. Despite its importance, uncertainties
remain high regarding external iron source fluxes and internal cycling
on a global scale. In this study, we used a global dissolved iron
dataset, including GEOTRACES measurements, to constrain source and
scavenging fluxes in the marine iron component of a global ocean
biogeochemical model. Our model simulations tested three key
uncertainties: source inputs of atmospheric soluble iron deposition
(varying from 1.4–3.4 Gmol/yr), reductive sedimentary iron release
(14–117 Gmol/yr), and compared a variable ligand parameterization to a
constant distribution. In each simulation, scavenging rates were tuned
to reproduce the observed global mean iron inventory for consistency.
The variable ligand parameterization improved the global model-data
misfit the most, suggesting that heterotrophic bacteria are an important
source of ligands to the ocean. Model simulations containing high source
fluxes of atmospheric soluble iron deposition (3.4 Gmol/yr) and
reductive sedimentary iron release (114 Gmol/yr) further improved the
model most notably in the surface ocean. High scavenging rates were then
required to maintain the iron inventory resulting in relatively short
surface and global ocean residence times of 0.83 and 7.5 years,
respectively. The model simulates a tight spatial coupling between
source inputs and scavenging rates, which may be too strong due to
underrepresented ligands near source inputs, contributing to large
uncertainties when constraining individual fluxes with dissolved iron
concentrations. Model biases remain high and are discussed to help
improve global marine iron cycle models.