Conundrum of missing iron in oxygen minimum zones solved

Friday, October 28, 2016 - 09:01 in Earth & Climate

Iron is an essential nutrient for biological productivity in the oceans. However, dissolved iron quickly combines with oxygen and is then no longer usable by or-ganisms. For a long time it has been a conundrum why even in low oxygen zones of the Tropics the dissolved iron concentrations are relatively low. An international research team led by GEOMAR Helmholtz Centre for Ocean Research Kiel has now discovered that in anoxic seawater iron is removed through reaction with nitrate instead of oxygen. This process also has an impact on the nitrogen and carbon cycle and ultimately on the climate, as the team points out in the international scientific journal Earth and Planetary Science Letters.

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