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Physical and biogeochemical properties of seasonal sea ice in the Atlantic sector of the Antarctic marginal ice zone

The study of Antarctic sea ice biogeochemistry has largely focused on samples collected from pack ice during summer, with few winter data available. Measurements from the Antarctic marginal ice zone (AMIZ) have proven even more difficult to obtain. The AMIZ is a broad, circumpolar feature of the Sou...

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Main Author: Audh, Riesna Reuben
Other Authors: Vichi, Marcello
Format: Thesis
Language:English
English
Published: Department of Oceanography 2025
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access_status_str Open Access
author Audh, Riesna Reuben
author2 Vichi, Marcello
author_browse Audh, Riesna Reuben
Vichi, Marcello
author_facet Vichi, Marcello
Audh, Riesna Reuben
author_sort Audh, Riesna Reuben
collection Thesis
description The study of Antarctic sea ice biogeochemistry has largely focused on samples collected from pack ice during summer, with few winter data available. Measurements from the Antarctic marginal ice zone (AMIZ) have proven even more difficult to obtain. The AMIZ is a broad, circumpolar feature of the Southern Ocean where sea ice begins to form during winter. The incorporation of seawater during sea-ice growth along with chemical and biological processes operating within the ice results in a complex biogeochemical environment within the sea ice matrix. This thesis presents the first biogeochemical datasets for sea ice collected in the Atlantic AMIZ during winter and spring, including measurements from young pancake ice, consolidated first-year ice and brash ice. It also proposes a revised set of standard operating procedures for conducting interdisciplinary sampling in complex marginal ice conditions. Measurements of sea-ice temperature, salinity, crystal structure, δ O18 , chlorophyll and nutrient concentrations were combined with model simulations to decipher the conditions under which the ice formed and grew, how these conditions influenced the subsequent biogeochemical environment and how the sea-ice properties evolved from winter to spring. Our findings confirm that winter sea ice is biologically active and further suggest that the growth of sea ice in the AMIZ is not a linear progression of thickness with habitat space reduction as sea ice consolidates. Instead, sea ice consolidates and thickens as a result of multiple cycles of breaking and rafting of young ice, and the biogeochemical signatures of the young ice are conserved in the reformed, consolidated ice cover. Novel nitrate and particle δ N15 measurements enabled us to investigate the seasonal evolution of sea-ice nitrogen cycle dynamics in the AMIZ, revealing that processes such as nitrate assimilation and nitrification are ongoing during winter. A comparison of our data to previous studies suggests a temporally advanced nitrogen cycle compared to pack ice in the region. Finally, the first measurements of winter pancake ice and spring brash ice biogeochemistry are highlighted and illustrate the seasonal influence on the sea ice environment and surface ocean in the AMIZ. The work detailed in this thesis significantly advances the available data and knowledge base for the AMIZ, particularly related to the biogeochemistry of sea ice, and will help to improve and validate future modelling efforts by providing observations in a severely understudied region.
format Thesis
id oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/42140
institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language English
eng
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:32:58.612Z
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2025
publishDateRange 2025
publishDateSort 2025
publisher Department of Oceanography
publisherStr Department of Oceanography
record_format dspace
source_str UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/42140 Physical and biogeochemical properties of seasonal sea ice in the Atlantic sector of the Antarctic marginal ice zone Audh, Riesna Reuben Vichi, Marcello Fawcett, Sarah Sea ice Atlantic Ice zone The study of Antarctic sea ice biogeochemistry has largely focused on samples collected from pack ice during summer, with few winter data available. Measurements from the Antarctic marginal ice zone (AMIZ) have proven even more difficult to obtain. The AMIZ is a broad, circumpolar feature of the Southern Ocean where sea ice begins to form during winter. The incorporation of seawater during sea-ice growth along with chemical and biological processes operating within the ice results in a complex biogeochemical environment within the sea ice matrix. This thesis presents the first biogeochemical datasets for sea ice collected in the Atlantic AMIZ during winter and spring, including measurements from young pancake ice, consolidated first-year ice and brash ice. It also proposes a revised set of standard operating procedures for conducting interdisciplinary sampling in complex marginal ice conditions. Measurements of sea-ice temperature, salinity, crystal structure, δ O18 , chlorophyll and nutrient concentrations were combined with model simulations to decipher the conditions under which the ice formed and grew, how these conditions influenced the subsequent biogeochemical environment and how the sea-ice properties evolved from winter to spring. Our findings confirm that winter sea ice is biologically active and further suggest that the growth of sea ice in the AMIZ is not a linear progression of thickness with habitat space reduction as sea ice consolidates. Instead, sea ice consolidates and thickens as a result of multiple cycles of breaking and rafting of young ice, and the biogeochemical signatures of the young ice are conserved in the reformed, consolidated ice cover. Novel nitrate and particle δ N15 measurements enabled us to investigate the seasonal evolution of sea-ice nitrogen cycle dynamics in the AMIZ, revealing that processes such as nitrate assimilation and nitrification are ongoing during winter. A comparison of our data to previous studies suggests a temporally advanced nitrogen cycle compared to pack ice in the region. Finally, the first measurements of winter pancake ice and spring brash ice biogeochemistry are highlighted and illustrate the seasonal influence on the sea ice environment and surface ocean in the AMIZ. The work detailed in this thesis significantly advances the available data and knowledge base for the AMIZ, particularly related to the biogeochemistry of sea ice, and will help to improve and validate future modelling efforts by providing observations in a severely understudied region. 2025-11-07T07:37:59Z 2025-11-07T07:37:59Z 2025 2025-11-07T07:00:45Z Thesis / Dissertation Doctoral PhD http://hdl.handle.net/11427/42140 en eng application/pdf Department of Oceanography Faculty of Science University of Cape Town
spellingShingle Sea ice
Atlantic
Ice zone
Audh, Riesna Reuben
Physical and biogeochemical properties of seasonal sea ice in the Atlantic sector of the Antarctic marginal ice zone
thesis_degree_str Doctoral
title Physical and biogeochemical properties of seasonal sea ice in the Atlantic sector of the Antarctic marginal ice zone
title_full Physical and biogeochemical properties of seasonal sea ice in the Atlantic sector of the Antarctic marginal ice zone
title_fullStr Physical and biogeochemical properties of seasonal sea ice in the Atlantic sector of the Antarctic marginal ice zone
title_full_unstemmed Physical and biogeochemical properties of seasonal sea ice in the Atlantic sector of the Antarctic marginal ice zone
title_short Physical and biogeochemical properties of seasonal sea ice in the Atlantic sector of the Antarctic marginal ice zone
title_sort physical and biogeochemical properties of seasonal sea ice in the atlantic sector of the antarctic marginal ice zone
topic Sea ice
Atlantic
Ice zone
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/42140
work_keys_str_mv AT audhriesnareuben physicalandbiogeochemicalpropertiesofseasonalseaiceintheatlanticsectoroftheantarcticmarginalicezone