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07/15/2025 12:03

Sweet discovery: sugars from the salty ocean are responsible for large part of the ice nuclei over southern hemisphere

Tilo Arnhold Presse- und Öffentlichkeitsarbeit
Leibniz-Institut für Troposphärenforschung e. V.

    Leipzig. Current climate models have so far been unable to adequately reproduce the clouds over the Southern Ocean around Antarctica. An international team has now taken an important step towards filling this gap: The researchers were able to prove that the majority of ice nuclei in the atmosphere there are due to sugar compounds from marine microorganisms in the seawater.

    They enter the clean air above the sea through sea spray and evaporation, causing water droplets to freeze and thus affecting cloud and precipitation formation. Ice formation in clouds has a major influence on the climate as ice particles in clouds reflect sunlight much more strongly than pure water clouds. These results emphasize the importance of biological sources for precipitation formation in remote marine regions such as around the Antarctic, as researchers from the Leibniz Institute for Tropospheric Research (TROPOS) and the Arctic University of Norway in Tromsø recently published in the journal Environmental Science & Technology.

    Ice formation processes influence the radiation properties, precipitation formation and consequently the lifespan of clouds. Ice formation is made possible by so-called ice nucleating particles (INPs). In remote marine regions such as the Southern Ocean, where INP concentrations in the clean atmosphere are low, large differences in radiative effects between models and measurements have been observed. A better understanding of the sources and properties of ice nuclei, such as aerosol particles originating from sea spray, is therefore necessary to improve climate models.

    It has been known for over a decade that ice-forming macromolecules produced by marine microorganisms such as fungi, protists or yeasts in seawater can enter the atmosphere via sea spray. For terrestrial sources, there is now some knowledge to be able to assign the macromolecules to specific proteins and polysaccharides. In contrast, there was previously a lack of knowledge about the chemical identity of these ice-forming macromolecules from marine sources. "During the Polarstern expedition PS106 in 2017, we observed increased glucose concentrations in Arctic samples and concluded that this glucose could be an indicator of ice nuclei in seawater. The monosaccharide glucose is a degradation product of polysaccharides. It was therefore obvious to us that polysaccharides could be the missing piece of the puzzle," explains Dr Sebastian Zeppenfeld from TROPOS.

    A cosmos of microorganisms such as bacteria, algae, marine diatoms, haloarchaea, viruses, yeasts and fungi live in the surface film of the oceans that separates seawater from the atmosphere above. In addition to algae and bacteria, which primarily contribute to the production and decomposition of biomass, marine fungi are now also attracting scientific interest. As their potential role as ice nuclei was still largely unexplored, the researchers took a closer look at marine fungi. "In this study, we investigated the ice nucleation of marine polysaccharides derived from marine fungi and protist, as well as commercially available standard polysaccharides," reports Dr Susan Hartmann from TROPOS, who examined ice nucleation in the laboratory using the INDA (Ice Nucleation Droplet Array) droplet freezing test. The result is a collection of data that indicates how many ice nuclei are formed at which temperatures by which components in the cloud droplets. The data now published are the first on protists and fungi from seawater that produce the aforementioned polysaccharides and catalyze ice formation. It was already known that marine biology produces large numbers of ice nuclei in the atmosphere. The new study has now shown that the polysaccharides explain the total number of biological ice nuclei between around -15 and -20 degrees centigrade. Together with the new data, various other studies provide a differentiated picture of which components in the unpolluted atmosphere of the southern high latitudes are responsible for ice in the cloud droplets: in warm clouds below -2 degrees Celsius these are mainly proteins, in medium-cold clouds below -10 degrees Celsius these are mainly the now proven polysaccharides and only in very cold clouds below -20 degrees Celsius the well-known mineral dust dominates. However, as extensive sources of mineral dust (e.g., deserts) are scarce in the Southern Hemisphere, the importance of mineral dust for ice formation in the very clean air over the seas around Antarctica is much lower than in the Northern Hemisphere. The mixed-phase clouds with liquid water and ice are mostly located in the temperature range between -15 and -20 degrees Celsius, i.e., precisely in the range in which the polysaccharides are among the most important ice nuclei. "In our simulations, we were able to show that at -15 to -16 degrees Celsius, the polysaccharides over the gigantic areas of the oceans in the clean Southern Hemisphere are probably the most important ice nuclei, i.e., they contribute more to ice formation than mineral dust emitted from the deserts, which is normally assumed to be the main type of ice nuclei in climate models. This is a new and important finding for climate models," summarizes Dr Roland Schrödner from TROPOS, who analyzed the data using the TM5 global atmospheric chemistry transport model.

    The study builds on years of preliminary work by three groups at TROPOS: The Aerosol Microphysics is investigating ice formation in cloud droplets for a long time, Atmospheric Modelling is researching the influence of various types of particles on the climate and Atmospheric Chemistry is analyzing the chemical composition. The researchers had previously measured the concentrations of polysaccharides in the atmosphere during various expeditions, including the Spanish Antarctic expedition PI-ICE, the German Arctic expedition PASCAL/PS106, the MarParCloud campaign in the tropical Atlantic and measurements on Spitsbergen in the Arctic. These new findings were only made possible by combining this work.

    From the researchers' point of view, this study emphasizes the importance of natural biological components in the atmosphere and that the biosphere and atmosphere are closely linked in the Earth system. If the ambitious climate protection goals of many countries are realized in the coming decades, man-made emissions are expected to decrease and natural aerosol particles will become even more important for cloud microphysics. Clouds in a clean environment, i.e., with a low number of droplets, react more sensitively to fluctuations in aerosol number concentration. The clean Southern Hemisphere around Antarctica is therefore particularly exciting for cloud research: The "HALO-South" mission of the German research aircraft HALO will investigate the interaction of clouds, aerosols and radiation over the Southern Ocean around New Zealand in more detail from July to October 2025 under TROPOS leadership. The measurements in the air will be supplemented by measurements on the ground. During the "goSouth-2" measurement campaign, researchers from TROPOS and Leipzig University will work with other partners to investigate the clouds of the Southern Ocean. To this end, the mobile aerosol and cloud remote sensing system LACROS will be deployed near Invercargill at the southern tip of New Zealand from September 2025 to March 2027. The clouds of the less anthropogenically influenced Southern Hemisphere still harbour many secrets that the researchers from Leipzig hope to uncover over the next few years.
    Tilo Arnhold

    Links:

    Laboratory tests on secondary ice formation
    https://www.tropos.de/forschung/aerosol-wolken-wechselwirkungen/prozessstudien-a...
    https://gepris.dfg.de/gepris/projekt/386137169?context=projekt&task=showDeta...;

    Antarctic Expedition PI-ICE (Polar atmosphere-ice-ocean Interactions: Impact on Climate and Ecology):
    https://www.tropos.de/aktuelles/pressemitteilungen/details/leipziger-forschende-...
    Research in polar regions: AC3, MOSAiC, PI-ICE:
    https://www.tropos.de/institut/abteilungen/chemie-der-atmosphaere/feldexperiment...
    Research in the tropical Atlantic: MarParCloud and ORIGAMY
    https://www.tropos.de/institut/abteilungen/chemie-der-atmosphaere/feldexperiment...

    EU project "Clouds and climate transitioning to post-fossil aerosol regime" (CleanCloud)
    https://projects.au.dk/cleancloud

    The Leibniz Institute for Tropospheric Research (TROPOS) is a member of the Leibniz Association, which unites 96 independent research institutions. Their focus ranges from the natural, engineering and environmental sciences to economics, spatial and social sciences and the humanities. Leibniz Institutes are dedicated to socially, economically and ecologically relevant issues.
    They conduct knowledge- and application-oriented research, including in the overarching Leibniz Research Alliances, are or maintain scientific infrastructures and offer research-based services. The Leibniz Association focuses on knowledge transfer, especially with the Leibniz Research Museums. It advises and informs politics, science, business and the public.
    Leibniz institutions maintain close cooperation with universities - including in the form of the Leibniz ScienceCampi, with industry and other partners in Germany and abroad. They are subject to a transparent and independent review process. Due to their national importance, the federal and state governments jointly fund the institutes of the Leibniz Association. The Leibniz Institutes employ around 21,300 people, including 12,200 scientists.
    The financial volume amounts to 2.2 billion euros. They are financed jointly by the federal and state governments. The basic funding of the Leibniz Institute for Tropospheric Research (TROPOS) is provided by the Federal Ministry of Education and Research (BMBF) and the Saxon State Ministry of Science and the Arts (SMWK). The institute is co-financed from tax revenue on the basis of the budget approved by the Saxon State Parliament.
    http://www.leibniz-gemeinschaft.de
    https://www.bmbf.de/
    https://www.smwk.sachsen.de/


    Contact for scientific information:

    Dr Susan Hartmann,
    Research Associate, Department of Atmospheric Microphysics, Leibniz Institute for Tropospheric Research (TROPOS), Leipzig
    Phone +49-341-2717-7140
    https://www.tropos.de/institut/ueber-uns/mitarbeitende/susan-hartmann
    and
    Dr Roland Schrödner
    Research Associate, Department of Atmospheric Process Modelling, Leibniz Institute for Tropospheric Research (TROPOS), Leipzig
    Phone +49-341-2717-7388
    https://www.tropos.de/institut/ueber-uns/mitarbeitende/roland-schroedner
    and
    Dr Sebastian Zeppenfeld
    Research Associate, Department of Atmospheric Chemistry, Leibniz Institute for Tropospheric Research (TROPOS), Leipzig
    Phone +49-341-2717-7360
    https://www.tropos.de/institut/ueber-uns/mitarbeitende/sebastian-zeppenfeld

    or
    Tilo Arnhold
    Public Relations, TROPOS
    Phone +49-341-2717-7189
    http://www.tropos.de/aktuelles/pressemitteilungen/


    Original publication:

    Lecture at EGU25
    Schrödner, R., Hartmann, S., Hassett, B., Hartmann, M., van Pinxteren, M., Fomba, K. W., Stratmann, F., Herrmann, H., Pöhlker, M., and Zeppenfeld, S.: Polysaccharides - Important Constituents of Ice Nucleating Particles of Marine Origin, EGU General Assembly 2025, Vienna, Austria, 27 Apr-2 May 2025, EGU25-15357, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu25-15357 , 2025.

    Publication in Environmental Science & Technology:
    Susan Hartmann, Roland Schrödner, Brandon T. Hassett, Markus Hartmann, Manuela van Pinxteren, Khanneh Wadinga Fomba, Frank Stratmann, Hartmut Herrmann, Mira Pöhlker, and Sebastian Zeppenfeld (2025): Polysaccharides─Important Constituents of Ice-Nucleating Particles of Marine Origin. Environmental Science & Technology 2025 59 (10), 5098-5108. DOI: 10.1021/acs.est.4c08014 (Published March 7, 2025)
    https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.est.4c08014
    The research work was funded by the Leibniz Institute for Tropospheric Research (TROPOS) and the German Research Foundation (DFG, project number 268020496-TRR 172) as part of the Transregio Collaborative Research Centre ArctiC Amplification: Climate-relevant Atmospheric and SurfaCe Processes and Feedback Mechanisms (AC)3 in subproject B04.


    More information:

    https://www.tropos.de/en/current-issues/press-releases/details/suesse-entdeckung...


    Images

    Clouds in the Antarctic. The influence of sugar compounds on cloud formation was analysed in 2019 by the Spanish expedition PI-ICE, in which researchers from TROPOS were also involved.
    Clouds in the Antarctic. The influence of sugar compounds on cloud formation was analysed in 2019 by ...
    Source: Sebastian Zeppenfeld, TROPOS
    Copyright: Sebastian Zeppenfeld, TROPOS

    Extensive exchange processes take place between the ocean and the atmosphere. Here at the transition between the open sea and the ice shelf. The images were taken in 2019 during the PI-ICE expedition, in which researchers from TROPOS were also involved.
    Extensive exchange processes take place between the ocean and the atmosphere. Here at the transition ...
    Source: Sebastian Zeppenfeld, TROPOS
    Copyright: Sebastian Zeppenfeld, TROPOS


    Criteria of this press release:
    Journalists
    Biology, Chemistry, Environment / ecology, Geosciences, Oceanology / climate
    transregional, national
    Research results, Scientific conferences
    English


     

    Clouds in the Antarctic. The influence of sugar compounds on cloud formation was analysed in 2019 by the Spanish expedition PI-ICE, in which researchers from TROPOS were also involved.


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    Extensive exchange processes take place between the ocean and the atmosphere. Here at the transition between the open sea and the ice shelf. The images were taken in 2019 during the PI-ICE expedition, in which researchers from TROPOS were also involved.


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