Moreno Allison R, Haffa Arlene L M
Division of Science and Environmental Policy, California State University, Monterey Bay, Seaside, California, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2014 Sep 24;9(9):e107690. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0107690. eCollection 2014.
Although iron is the fourth most abundant element in the Earth's crust, bioavailable iron limits marine primary production in about one third of the ocean. This lack of iron availability has implications in climate change because the removal of carbon dioxide from the atmosphere by phytoplankton requires iron. Using literature values for global fish biomass estimates, and elemental composition data we estimate that fish biota store between 0.7-7 × 10(11) g of iron. Additionally, the global fish population recycles through excretion between 0.4-1.5 × 10(12) g of iron per year, which is of a similar magnitude as major recognized sources of iron (e.g. dust, sediments, ice sheet melting). In terms of biological impact this iron could be superior to dust inputs due to the distributed deposition and to the greater solubility of fecal pellets compared to inorganic minerals. To estimate a loss term due to anthropogenic activity the total commercial catch for 1950 to 2010 was obtained from the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations. Marine catch data were separated by taxa. High and low end values for elemental composition were obtained for each taxonomic category from the literature and used to calculate iron per mass of total harvest over time. The marine commercial catch is estimated to have removed 1-6 × 10(9) g of iron in 1950, the lowest values on record. There is an annual increase to 0.7-3 × 10(10) g in 1996, which declines to 0.6-2 × 10(10) g in 2010. While small compared to the total iron terms in the cycle, these could have compounding effects on distribution and concentration patterns globally over time. These storage, recycling, and export terms of biotic iron are not currently included in ocean iron mass balance calculations. These data suggest that fish and anthropogenic activity should be included in global oceanic iron cycles.
尽管铁是地壳中含量第四丰富的元素,但生物可利用铁限制了约三分之一海洋区域的海洋初级生产力。铁的这种缺乏对气候变化有影响,因为浮游植物从大气中去除二氧化碳需要铁。利用全球鱼类生物量估计的文献值和元素组成数据,我们估计鱼类生物群中铁的储存量在0.7 - 7×10¹¹克之间。此外,全球鱼类种群每年通过排泄循环利用0.4 - 1.5×10¹²克铁,这与主要公认的铁源(如尘埃、沉积物、冰盖融化)规模相似。就生物影响而言,由于粪便颗粒的分布沉积以及与无机矿物质相比更高的溶解度,这种铁可能比尘埃输入更具优势。为了估算人为活动造成的损失项,从联合国粮食及农业组织获取了1950年至2010年的商业总捕捞量。海洋捕捞数据按分类群进行了划分。从文献中获取了每个分类类别的元素组成的高端和低端值,并用于计算随时间推移每单位总捕捞量的铁含量。据估计,1950年海洋商业捕捞量去除了1 - 6×10⁹克铁,为有记录以来的最低值。到1996年每年增加到0.7 - 3×10¹⁰克,到2010年又降至0.6 - 2×10¹⁰克。虽然与循环中的总铁量相比很小,但随着时间的推移,这些可能会对全球的分布和浓度模式产生复合影响。目前,生物铁的这些储存、循环利用和输出项未包含在海洋铁质量平衡计算中。这些数据表明,鱼类和人为活动应纳入全球海洋铁循环中。