Published February 13, 2026 | Version v1

Polar primary aerosols across the ocean-sea ice-snow-atmosphere interface: From sources to impacts

  • 1. ROR icon Colorado State University
  • 2. Institute of Oceans Sciences, Fisheries and Oceans Canada
  • 3. ROR icon Leibniz Institute for Tropospheric Research
  • 4. ROR icon University of Liège
  • 5. ROR icon Fisheries and Oceans Canada
  • 6. ROR icon Laboratoire atmosphères, milieux, observations spatiales
  • 7. ROR icon University of Alberta
  • 8. ROR icon University of Michigan–Ann Arbor
  • 9. ROR icon Institut des Géosciences de l'Environnement
  • 10. ROR icon British Antarctic Survey
  • 11. ROR icon Alfred-Wegener-Institut Helmholtz-Zentrum für Polar- und Meeresforschung
  • 12. ROR icon University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign

Description

Primary aerosols play a critical role in polar climate systems, influencing cloud formation, precipitation, radiative balance, and surface energy budgets. This paper provides a comprehensive synthesis of primary aerosol sources, transformation and removal processes, and broader atmospheric impacts in polar regions, emphasizing their links to ocean and sea ice biogeochemistry. These aerosols (including sea salt, primary organic aerosol, and primary biological aerosol particles) originate from marine and cryospheric environments and are emitted through physical processes, such as wave breaking, bubble bursting, and blowing snow. Emission sources include seawater, sea ice, snow, and freshwater from river discharge and glacial runoff. Once airborne, these particles can serve as a chemical reservoir, influencing atmospheric composition and reactivity, and as seeds for cloud droplet and ice crystal formation, influencing cloud microphysics and polar climate. Despite their importance, many of the processes governing primary aerosol emissions and transformations remain poorly constrained. The most pressing knowledge gaps pertain to emission processes, limited spatiotemporal observational coverage, instrumentation constraints, parameterization development, and the integration of interdisciplinary expertise. To improve our understanding of primary aerosol drivers and their response to climate, future research efforts should prioritize strategically coordinated and cross-disciplinary process studies, advancements in measurement technologies and coverage, and close collaboration between modelers and observational scientists to inform and refine model parameterizations. As polar regions continue to undergo profound changes marked by increased precipitation, reduced sea and land ice, freshening oceans, and shifting ecosystem dynamics, characterizing present-day primary aerosol populations is vital. Improved understanding will be essential for anticipating future changes in aerosol-radiation and aerosol-cloud interactions and their implications for polar and global climate systems.

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Additional details

Funding

Scientific Committee On Oceanic Research
SCOR OCE-2140395
Atmospheric Radiation Measurement User Facility
Atmospheric Systems Research DE-SC0022046
Atmospheric Radiation Measurement User Facility
Atmospheric Systems Research DE-SC0019745
U.S. National Science Foundation
OPP-1946657
U.S. National Science Foundation
OPP-2226864
U.S. National Science Foundation
OPP-2130204
U.S. National Science Foundation
AGS-2246489
European Commission
CRiceS - Climate relevant interactions and feedbacks: the key role of sea ice and snow in the polar and global climate system 101003826
European Commission
CERTAINTY - Cloud-aERosol inTeractions & their impActs IN The earth sYstem 101137680
Government of Canada
NFRFG-2020-00451
Helmholtz Association of German Research Centres
PoF IV
Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft
TRR 172 268020496
United States Department of Energy
Early Career and Atmospheric System Research DE-SC0019172
United States Department of Energy
Early Career and Atmospheric System Research DE-SC0022046
United States Department of Energy
Early Career and Atmospheric System Research DE-SC0020098