Abstract

This paper presents the first empirical estimates of dimethyl sulfide (DMS) gas fluxes across permeable sea ice in the Arctic. DMS is known to act as a major potential source of aerosols that strongly influence the Earth’s radiative balance in remote marine regions during the ice-free season. Results from a sampling campaign, undertaken in 2015 between June 2 and June 28 in the ice-covered Western Baffin Bay, revealed the presence of high algal biomass in the bottom 0.1-m section of sea ice (21 to 380 µg Chl a L–1) combined with the presence of high DMS concentrations (212–840 nmol L–1). While ice algae acted as local sources of DMS in bottom sea ice, thermohaline changes within the brine network, from gravity drainage to vertical stabilization, exerted strong control on the distribution of DMS within the interior of the ice. We estimated both the mean DMS molecular diffusion coefficient in brine (5.2 × 10–5 cm2 s–1 ± 51% relative S.D., n = 10) and the mean bulk transport coefficient within sea ice (33 × 10–5 cm2 s–1 ± 41% relative S.D., n = 10). The estimated DMS fluxes ± S.D. from the bottom ice to the atmosphere ranged between 0.47 ± 0.08 µmol m–2 d–1 (n = 5, diffusion) and 0.40 ± 0.15 µmol m–2 d–1 (n = 5, bulk transport) during the vertically stable phase. These fluxes fall within the lower range of direct summer sea-to-air DMS fluxes reported in the Arctic. Our results indicate that upward transport of DMS, from the algal-rich bottom of first-year sea ice through the permeable sea ice, may represent an important pathway for this biogenic gas toward the atmosphere in ice-covered oceans in spring and summer.

Highlights

  • Dimethyl sulfide (DMS) is the most abundant gaseous ­precursor of atmospheric sulfate aerosols in remote marine regions (Bates et al, 1992; Andreae and Crutzen, 1997)

  • We investigated the temporal variations in DMS concentrations during the late melting period within various sea-ice related habitats, including snow, sea ice, under-ice water and melt ponds

  • Our results suggest that the increase in interior sea-ice DMS after June 15 resulted from the upward transport of this gas from the DMS-rich bottom sea ice

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Summary

Introduction

Dimethyl sulfide (DMS) is the most abundant gaseous ­precursor of atmospheric sulfate aerosols in remote marine regions (Bates et al, 1992; Andreae and Crutzen, 1997). Pristine atmospheric conditions that may be found at high latitudes (Vogt and Liss, 2009) make DMSderived aerosols significant in regional cloud formation processes (Carslaw et al, 2013). DMSP plays various roles in phytoplankton, including osmoregulation (Kirst et al, 1991; Lyon et al, 2016), cryoprotection (Karsten et al, 1996), and prevention of cellular oxidation (Sunda et al, 2002). DMS is linked to dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO), a cellular metabolite that is both a source and a sink of DMS through oxidation and bacterial consumption processes, respectively (Asher et al, 2011; Hatton et al, 2012). Between 18 and 34 Tg of S y–1 are ventilated as DMS, making this gas the main contributor to the global biogenic flux of atmospheric sulfur (Lana et al, 2011)

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