Each spring, powerful dust storms in the deserts of Mongolia and northern China send thick clouds of particles into the atmosphere.
Eastward1 winds sweep these particles as far as the Pacific, where dust ultimately settles in the open ocean. This desert dust contains, among other minerals, iron -- an essential
nutrient2 for hundreds of species of phytoplankton that make up the ocean's food base. Now scientists at MIT, Columbia University, and Florida State University have
determined3 that once iron is deposited in the ocean, it has a very short residence time, spending only six months in surface waters before sinking into the deep ocean. This high
turnover4 of iron signals that large
seasonal5 changes in desert dust may have dramatic effects on surface phytoplankton that depend on iron.
"If there are changes to the sizes of deserts in Asia, or changes in the way people are using land, there could be a larger source of dust to the ocean," says Chris Hayes, a postdoc in MIT's Department of Earth,
Atmospheric6, and Planetary Sciences (EAPS). "It's difficult to predict how the whole
ecosystem7 will change, but because the residence time [of iron] is very short, year-to-year changes in dust will definitely have an impact on phytoplankton."
The team's results are published in the journal Geochemica et Cosmochimica Acta. Co-authors include Ed Boyle, a professor of ocean geochemistry at MIT; David McGee, the Kerr-McGee Career Development Assistant Professor in EAPS; and former postdoc Jessica Fitzsimmons.