9:15 AM - 9:30 AM
[U08-02] Behaviors of primitive marine ecosystems and atmospheric CO under a reduced atmosphere with an organic haze layer
Keywords:early Earth, atmospheric photochemistry
We show that the atmospheric H2 level decreases as the haze layer progresses, which decreases the primary productivity by suppressing the activity of H2-based photoautotrophs. This would have worked to stabilize the formation rate of hydrocarbon haze layers by suppressing the supply rate of biogenic CH4. The atmospheric CO level, on the other hand, increases as the haze layer progresses, so the CH4 production rate owing to CO-using chemoautotrophs increases. This would have worked as a positive feedback mechanism that enhances the activity of CO-using chemoautotrophs, a production rate of CH4, and the formation rate of haze particles when the haze layer starts to form in the atmosphere. The behaviors of both atmospheric H2 and CO under the haze layer are associated with the change in the reaction rate of CO and OH in the troposphere. This is driven by the changes in the tropospheric temperature and the photodissociation rate of water vapor. The accumulation of CO in the atmosphere may explain the occurrence of a rapid transition of the total organic carbon and δ13C in the geologic record at the onset of the development of an organic haze layer (Izon et al., 2017). This would proceed until the surface temperature decreases to limit the activity of decomposers (e.g. Domagal-Goldman et al., 2008). The stability of the hazy climate state would have been brought by the negative feedback for the formation rate of haze particles, which is driven by the changes in the activity of decomposers and H2-based photoautotrophs. The H2-based photoautotroph, CO-consuming chemoautotroph, and decomposers respond to the formation of the hydrocarbon haze layer differently, owing to their different responses to the surface temperature and the atmosphere photochemical reactions. The hazy climate state on early Earth would have been achieved by such tight interactions between atmospheric photochemistry and marine microbial ecosystem. This may indicate the fundamental role of CO- and H2-related metabolic pathways in affecting the atmospheric composition of early Earth and Earth-like exoplanets.