Abstract
A Saharan soil, considered as a proxy for Saharan aerosols, was used to perform radio-labelled phosphate adsorption experiments using 33PO 4 3–: leached particles were exposed to poisoned western Mediterranean seawater for varying lengths of time. The measured adsorption capacity of Saharan dust for phosphate was 0.13 μmol g –1. Considering this value and an annual Saharan dust deposition of 12.5 t km –2 year –1, we show that Saharan particles do not represent a significant sink for seawater phosphate in the western Mediterranean Sea. This result is in agreement with that determined from a similar approach conducted in the eastern basin. As a consequence, the unusual N/P ratio measured in the whole Mediterranean Sea (up to 29) cannot be explained by the adsorption process of seawater phosphate onto Saharan dust.
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