Litcius/Paper detail

Iron limitation of kelp growth may prevent ocean afforestation

Ellie R. Paine, Philip W. Boyd, Robert F. Strzepek, Michael J. Ellwood, Elizabeth Brewer, Guillermo Díaz-Pulido, Matthias Schmid, Catriona L. Hurd

2023Communications Biology33 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Carbon dioxide removal (CDR) and emissions reduction are essential to alleviate climate change. Ocean macroalgal afforestation (OMA) is a CDR method already undergoing field trials where nearshore kelps, on rafts, are purposefully grown offshore at scale. Dissolved iron (dFe) supply often limits oceanic phytoplankton growth, however this potentially rate-limiting factor is being overlooked in OMA discussions. Here, we determine the limiting dFe concentrations for growth and key physiological functions of a representative kelp species, Macrocystis pyrifera, considered as a promising candidate for OMA. dFe additions to oceanic seawater ranging 0.01-20.2 nM Fe' ‒ Fe' being the sum of dissolved inorganic Fe(III) species ‒ result in impaired physiological functions and kelp mortality. Kelp growth cannot be sustained at oceanic dFe concentrations, which are 1000-fold lower than required by M. pyrifera. OMA may require additional perturbation of offshore waters via dFe fertilisation.

Topics & Concepts

KelpMacrocystis pyriferaLimitingOceanographyEnvironmental scienceKelp forestOcean acidificationPhytoplanktonSeawaterSubmarine pipelineEffects of global warming on oceansBlue carbonClimate changeEcologyBiologyGlobal warmingCarbon dioxideNutrientCarbon sequestrationGeologyMechanical engineeringEngineeringMarine and coastal plant biologyCoastal wetland ecosystem dynamicsMarine and coastal ecosystems