
Ruoyu Sun
Articles
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Feb 20, 2025 |
nature.com | Maodian Liu |Robert Mason |Thomas Bianchi |Qianru Zhang |Xiaolong Li |Ruoyu Sun | +6 more
The Southern Ocean, one of Earth’s most productive areas, is widely recognized as a major sink for atmospheric carbon and mercury, tightly coupling primary production with the sedimentary sequestration of these elements. The impacts of climate warming on these processes, however, remain unclear. Here, we utilize 20 sediment cores from the Ross Sea, a representative ice-shelf sea in West Antarctica, to examine how Holocene warming and extensive glacial retreat influenced carbon and mercury sequestration. We find that organic carbon (OC) burial has been relatively constant over the past 12,000 years, whereas mercury burial in the Ross Embayment and open ocean exhibited three- and eightfold increases, respectively. Carbon isotopes and accumulation profiles suggest warming boosted glacial- and terrestrial-derived OC inputs to the ocean, while trace elements and biomarkers reveal a declining contribution offshore. Biomarker ratios further indicate greater remineralization of this OC in the open ocean. Consequently, enhanced OC degradation, coupled with rising external mercury inputs, drives mercury enrichment in marine sediments before reaching the seafloor. These findings imply that ongoing warming could trigger a positive feedback loop, accelerating OC degradation into CO2 and amplifying the impacts of anthropogenic mercury on Southern Ocean ecosystems. This study reveals that Holocene warming and glacial retreat in West Antarctica reduced carbon sequestration but enhanced mercury burial in Ross Sea sediments, suggesting future warming could further accelerate carbon loss and mercury accumulation.
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