Title of article
Importance of organic Fe complexing ligands in the Mississippi River plume
Author/Authors
Rodney T. Powell، نويسنده , , Amy Wilson-Finelli، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2003
Pages
7
From page
757
To page
763
Abstract
As part of a larger program focused on understanding the biogeochemistry of large river plumes, we participated in two
expeditions during 2000 to sample the Mississippi River plume. Surface water samples were collected using a trace metal clean towed
fish and analyzed for total dissolved Fe, organic Fe complexing ligands and their associated conditional stability constants. The
ligands in the river plume have conditional stability constants (log K9FeL between 10.5 and 12.3 with an average of 11.2 and standard
deviation of 0.6) very similar to ligands found in the open ocean. Comparison of high flow and low flow regimes indicates that
variability in flow may be the main cause of the variability in Fe concentrations in the plume. The organic Fe complexing ligands are
in greatest excess during a time of higher flow. These ligands are responsible for maintaining very high (5 nM) Fe concentrations
throughout the plume. Due to complexation with these organic ligands, the concentration of Fe remains above the Fe-hydroxide
solubility level until a salinity above 35 is reached where there appears to be a sink for Fe in the less productive waters. Therefore, Fe is
transported a great distance from the river source and is available for biological utilization in the coastal zone.
Keywords
Iron , Organic complexation , Speciation , Mississippi river plume , Estuary
Journal title
Estuarine, Coastal and Shelf Science
Serial Year
2003
Journal title
Estuarine, Coastal and Shelf Science
Record number
952737
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