Abstract

Saharan dust events are currently the predominant source of lithogenic particles in the Canary Basin. In order to quantify this input and its relationship with the biogenic fluxes, a sediment trap was deployed in a free-drifting system at 150 m depth, 50 km off the north coast of Gran Canaria (Canary Islands). The mineralogy of the lithogenic particles included illite, calcite, hematite quartz, barite and kaolinite. The biogenic matter was composed of chitin, transparent exopolymer particles, and carbonates from foraminifera and gastropod shells. The average Saharan dust flux over the ocean surface was approximately 5±4 mg m–2 day-1. The lithogenic, carbonate and chitin fluxes were 0.8±0.6, 6.0±7.4 and 154±386 mg m–2 day-1, respectively. A fairly strong Saharan dust event during sampling was observed in the trap, with a delay of three days in the peaks of lithogenic and biogenic fluxes. The theoretical settling velocity of the lithogenic particles associated with Saharan dust events at 150 m depth was vStokes=275 m day-1, and the experimental settling was about 50 m day-1. The associated sinking behaviour of particulate organic carbon and biogenic and lithogenic fluxes observed in this study may contribute to a more realistic prediction of these fluxes in carbon biological pump models.

Highlights

  • Lithogenic particles enter the marine environment through either fluvial or aeolian transport

  • The average grain size of lithogenic particles was coarser as the lithogenic fluxes increased, except for 9d (Figs 4 and 5A)

  • Chitin flux showed significant differences between diurnal and nocturnal periods, but the lithogenic, foraminifera and particulate organic carbon (POC) fluxes did not

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Summary

Introduction

Lithogenic particles enter the marine environment through either fluvial or aeolian transport. Dust deposition is a key process for marine biota, because it transports significant amounts of iron This metal is found in silicates and iron oxy-hydroxide forms of the Saharan plume dust reaching the ocean surface (Journet et al 2008, Engelbrecht et al 2014). This dust input increases biomass and metabolic activity (Hernández-León et al 2004, 2007, Herrera et al 2017), and has a considerable ballast effect on particulate organic carbon (POC) flux (Mari et al 2017, van der Jagt et al 2018)

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