Iron‐Phosphorus Feedbacks Drive Multidecadal Oscillations in Baltic Sea Hypoxia
Publication date
2021-12-28
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Abstract
Hypoxia has occurred intermittently in the Baltic Sea since the establishment of brackish-water conditions at ∼8,000 years B.P., principally as recurrent hypoxic events during the Holocene Thermal Maximum (HTM) and the Medieval Climate Anomaly (MCA). Sedimentary phosphorus release has been implicated as a key driver of these events, but previous paleoenvironmental reconstructions have lacked the sampling resolution to investigate feedbacks in past iron-phosphorus cycling on short timescales. Here we employ Laser Ablation (LA)-ICP-MS scanning of sediment cores to generate ultra-high resolution geochemical records of past hypoxic events. We show that in-phase multidecadal oscillations in hypoxia intensity and iron-phosphorus cycling occurred throughout these events. Using a box model, we demonstrate that such oscillations were likely driven by instabilities in the dynamics of iron-phosphorus cycling under preindustrial phosphorus loads, and modulated by external climate forcing. Oscillatory behavior could complicate the recovery from hypoxia during future trajectories of external loading reductions.
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SDG 13 - Climate Action
Citation
Jilbert, T, Gustafsson, B G, Veldhuijzen, S, Reed, D C, Helmond, N A G M, Hermans, M & Slomp, C P 2021, 'Iron‐Phosphorus Feedbacks Drive Multidecadal Oscillations in Baltic Sea Hypoxia', Geophysical Research Letters, vol. 48, no. 24, e2021GL095908, pp. 1-11. https://doi.org/10.1029/2021GL095908