Paleoceanographic evidence points to the Southern Ocean as a strong sink for atmospheric CO2 during the Last Glacial Maximum (LGM), but no consensus about the responsible mechanism has yet been reached. Martin (Paleoceanography 5 (1990) 1) postulated that greater iron input during the LGM could have stimulated phytoplankton to consume the surface nutrients in the Southern Ocean, increasing carbon export substantially. We use a simple ecological model to elucidate the extent to which iron availability affects export production in the southwest Pacific sector. The model includes the effect of iron in a semi-explicit way. Based on the physiological response of the photosynthetic apparatus, the simulated phytoplankton growth rates are explicitl...