Abstract
The ocean is the dominant source of atmospheric methyl iodide (CH 3I). The mechanisms of CH3I production in the marine environment are poorly understood. A previous laboratory and field study suggested Prochlorococcus marinus, a ubiquitous marine cyanobacterium, is a globally significant biological producer of CH3I. In this study, CH3I concentrations were measured in cultures of P. marinus (high-light-adapted MED4 and low-light-adapted CCMP 1427) and the marine cyanobacterium Synechococcus. Cell-normalized production rates from P. marinus cultures (MED4) averaged 1.6 (±0.9) molecules of CH3I cell-1 d-1; these rates were 1000-fold lower than production rates reported for the previous study, which reported comparable concentrations of CH3I in cultures but cell concentrations about 1000-fold lower than measured in this study. Extrapolating CH3I production rates from the current study yields a global production rate of 0.6 Mmol yr-1 which accounts for 0.03% of the estimated global CH 3I production, suggesting P. marinus is not a globally significant source of CH3I. Copyright 2010 by the American Geophysical Union.
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CITATION STYLE
Brownell, D. K., Moore, R. M., & Cullen, J. J. (2010). Production of methyl halides by prochlorococcus and synechococcus. Global Biogeochemical Cycles, 24(2). https://doi.org/10.1029/2009GB003671
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