Atmospheric dimethylsulfide (DMSa), continually derived from the world’s oceans, is a feed gas for the tropospheric production of new sulfate particles, leading to cloud condensation nuclei that influence the formation and properties of marine clouds and ultimately the Earth’s radiation budget. Previous studies on the Great Barrier Reef (GBR), Australia, have indicated coral reefs are significant sessile sources of DMSa capable of enhancing the tropospheric DMSa burden mainly derived from phytoplankton in the surface ocean; however, specific environmental evidence of coral reef DMS emissions and their characteristics is lacking. By using on-site automated continuous analysis of DMSa and meteorological parameters at Heron Island in the southern GBR, we show that the coral reef was the source of occasional spikes of DMSa identified above the oceanic DMSa background signal. In most instances, these DMSa spikes were detected at low tide under low wind speeds, indicating they originated from the lagoonal platform reef surrounding the island, although evidence of longer-range transport of DMSa from a 70 km stretch of coral reefs in the southern GBR was also observed. The most intense DMSa spike occurred in the winter dry season at low tide when convective precipitation fell onto the aerially exposed platform reef. This co-occurrence of events appeared to biologically shock the coral resulting in a seasonally aberrant extreme DMSa spike concentration of 45.9 nmol m−3 (1122 ppt). Seasonal DMS emission fluxes for the 2012 wet season and 2013 dry season campaigns at Heron Island were 5.0 and 1.4 µmol m−2 day−1 , respectively, of which the coral reef was estimated to contribute 4 % during the wet season and 14 % during the dry season to the dominant oceanic flux.
Journal article
Coral reef origins of atmospheric dimethylsulfide at Heron Island, southern Great Barrier Reef, Australia
Biogeosciences, Vol.14, pp.229-239
2017
Published (Version of record)CC BY V3.0, Open Access
Coral reef origins of atmospheric dimethylsulfide at Heron Island, southern Great Barrier Reef, Australia
Published (Version of record)CC BY V3.0, Open
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Abstract
Details
- Title
- Coral reef origins of atmospheric dimethylsulfide at Heron Island, southern Great Barrier Reef, Australia
- Creators
- Hilton B Swan - Southern Cross UniversityGraham B Jones - Southern Cross UniversityElisabeth S M Deschaseaux - Southern Cross UniversityBradley D Eyre - Southern Cross University
- Publication Details
- Biogeosciences, Vol.14, pp.229-239
- Grant note
- This research was funded from grants to G.B. Jones by the Marine Ecology Research Centre of Southern Cross University (SCU), the Australian Institute for Marine Science (AIMS, Townsville, Qld), and the Australian Research Council Discovery Program (ARCDP) DP140100681. Additional funding was provided from ARCDP grants DP110103638 and DP160100248 awarded to Bradley D. Eyre.
- Identifiers
- 4361; 991012820725702368
- Academic Unit
- Faculty of Science and Engineering; Marine Ecology Research Centre; School of Environment, Science and Engineering; Science; Centre for Coastal Biogeochemistry
- Resource Type
- Journal article