Sources, Occurrence and Characteristics of Fluorescent Biological
Aerosol Particles Measured over the Pristine Southern Ocean
Abstract
In this study we investigate the occurrence of primary biological
aerosol particles (PBAP) over all sectors of the Southern Ocean (SO)
based on a 90-day dataset collected during the Antarctic
Circumnavigation Expedition (ACE) in austral summer 2016-2017.
Super-micrometer PBAP (1 to 16 µm diameter) were measured by a wide band
integrated bioaerosol sensor (WIBS-4). Low (3σ) and high (9σ)
fluorescence thresholds are used to obtain statistics on fluorescent and
hyper-fluorescent PBAP, respectively. Our focus is on data obtained over
the pristine ocean, i.e. more than 200 km away from land. The results
indicate that (hyper-)fluorescent PBAP are correlated to atmospheric
variables associated with sea spray aerosol (SSA) particles (wind speed,
total super-micrometer aerosol number concentration, chloride and sodium
concentrations). This suggests that a main source of PBAP over the SO is
SSA. The median fraction of fluorescent and hyper-fluorescent PBAP to
super-micrometer SSA is 1.6% and 0.13%, respectively. We demonstrate
that the fraction of (hyper-)fluorescent PBAP to total super-micrometer
particles positively correlates with concentrations of bacteria and
several taxa of phytoplankton measured in seawater, indicating that
marine biota concentrations modulate the PBAP source flux. We
investigate the fluorescent properties of (hyper-)fluorescent PBAP for
several events that occurred near land masses. We find that the
fluorescence signal characteristics of particles near land is much more
variable than over the pristine ocean. We conclude that the source and
concentration of fluorescent PBAP over the open ocean is similar across
all sectors of the SO.