Evidence for significant photochemical production of carbon monoxide by particles in coastal and oligotrophic marine waters

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Abstract

Carbon monoxide (CO) photoproduction from particulate and chromophoric dissolved organic matter (CDOM) was determined in seawater from open-ocean and coastal areas. In confirmatory tests, poisoned or non-poisoned filtered and unfiltered blue-water samples, were exposed to sunlight. CO photoproduction was 21-42% higher in the unfiltered than in the filtered samples. In a more thorough study utilizing concentrated particles prepared by 0.2-μm cross-flow filtration, samples containing varying levels of particles were irradiated under simulated solar radiation. Their CO photoproduction rates increased linearly with particle concentration factor. Particulate CO production was 11-35% of CDOM-based CO production. On an absorbed-photons basis, the former was 30-108% more efficient than the latter. This study suggests that in both coastal and blue waters these new-found particulate photoprocesses are of similar biogeochemical importance to the well-known CDOM photoproduction term. Copyright 2009 by the American Geophysical Union.

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Xie, H., & Zafiriou, O. C. (2009). Evidence for significant photochemical production of carbon monoxide by particles in coastal and oligotrophic marine waters. Geophysical Research Letters, 36(23). https://doi.org/10.1029/2009GL041158

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