Anna Hughes , Clare E. Reimers, Kristen E. Fogaren, Yvan Alleau
{"title":"Spatiotemporal variability in benthic-pelagic coupling on the Oregon-Washington shelf","authors":"Anna Hughes , Clare E. Reimers, Kristen E. Fogaren, Yvan Alleau","doi":"10.1016/j.marchem.2024.104473","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<div><div>Continental shelf sediments are sinks for dissolved oxygen (DO) and sources of many major and minor nutrients required for oceanic surface primary production resulting in a strong coupling between benthic and pelagic biogeochemical cycling. In this study, we present paired benthic flux and bottom water biogeochemical data collected from two Oregon shelf sites sampled approximately quarter-annually between 2017 and 2019, and from nine other shelf sites, located off central Oregon to southern Washington, and sampled in either July or September 2022. The benthic fluxes were determined using a novel set-up for <em>ex situ</em> core incubations. When fluxes were normalized to the respective measured sediment DO flux, ratios aligned well with ratios of past flux estimates from the region which were determined using <em>in situ</em> benthic chambers; however, the <em>ex situ</em> flux magnitudes are generally lower. Our findings demonstrate sediments acting as net sinks for DO and nitrate, and sources for phosphate, silicate, and ammonium. Shelf-wide estimates of the relative contribution of sediment-remineralized phosphate and silicate to surface waters on the Oregon shelf, indicate that shelf sediments supplied at least 5 ± 7 % and 37 ± 7 % of the available phosphate and silicate during recent summer upwelling seasons, with similar, respective estimates of 2 ± 9 % and 35 ± 11 % during the spring. Remineralization ratios of C:N:P:O<sub>2</sub> corroborate increased denitrification during the summer and weak denitrification during the winter due to a more oxygenated water column in support of previous studies. A multi-tracer water mass analysis also exhibited an increased water-column nitrate deficit during the summer and fall. Benthic denitrification rates, estimated from benthic fluxes, were between 0.2 and 1.8 mmol N m<sup>-2</sup> day<sup>-1</sup> and in the range of past assessments during the upwelling season. A simple model, applied to further constrain the contributions to bottom water fixed nitrogen (N) loss under assumptions of benthic boundary layer height and residence time, showed that although sediment denitrification could readily account for total bottom water N losses during the summer, additional water-column denitrification is indicated by the strength of early fall deficits at some stations. Constraining water-column and benthic contributions to fixed N deficits is important for understanding how N-limited primary productivity in this region will respond to projected ocean deoxygenation under anticipated global warming. These results demonstrate the interplay of sediment and water-column remineralization processes across the OR-WA shelf. As in most shallow marine systems, the two are integral to the ecosystem dynamics and responses to environmental change.</div></div>","PeriodicalId":18219,"journal":{"name":"Marine Chemistry","volume":"268 ","pages":"Article 104473"},"PeriodicalIF":3.0000,"publicationDate":"2024-11-26","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Marine Chemistry","FirstCategoryId":"89","ListUrlMain":"https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0304420324001245","RegionNum":3,"RegionCategory":"地球科学","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q2","JCRName":"CHEMISTRY, MULTIDISCIPLINARY","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
Continental shelf sediments are sinks for dissolved oxygen (DO) and sources of many major and minor nutrients required for oceanic surface primary production resulting in a strong coupling between benthic and pelagic biogeochemical cycling. In this study, we present paired benthic flux and bottom water biogeochemical data collected from two Oregon shelf sites sampled approximately quarter-annually between 2017 and 2019, and from nine other shelf sites, located off central Oregon to southern Washington, and sampled in either July or September 2022. The benthic fluxes were determined using a novel set-up for ex situ core incubations. When fluxes were normalized to the respective measured sediment DO flux, ratios aligned well with ratios of past flux estimates from the region which were determined using in situ benthic chambers; however, the ex situ flux magnitudes are generally lower. Our findings demonstrate sediments acting as net sinks for DO and nitrate, and sources for phosphate, silicate, and ammonium. Shelf-wide estimates of the relative contribution of sediment-remineralized phosphate and silicate to surface waters on the Oregon shelf, indicate that shelf sediments supplied at least 5 ± 7 % and 37 ± 7 % of the available phosphate and silicate during recent summer upwelling seasons, with similar, respective estimates of 2 ± 9 % and 35 ± 11 % during the spring. Remineralization ratios of C:N:P:O2 corroborate increased denitrification during the summer and weak denitrification during the winter due to a more oxygenated water column in support of previous studies. A multi-tracer water mass analysis also exhibited an increased water-column nitrate deficit during the summer and fall. Benthic denitrification rates, estimated from benthic fluxes, were between 0.2 and 1.8 mmol N m-2 day-1 and in the range of past assessments during the upwelling season. A simple model, applied to further constrain the contributions to bottom water fixed nitrogen (N) loss under assumptions of benthic boundary layer height and residence time, showed that although sediment denitrification could readily account for total bottom water N losses during the summer, additional water-column denitrification is indicated by the strength of early fall deficits at some stations. Constraining water-column and benthic contributions to fixed N deficits is important for understanding how N-limited primary productivity in this region will respond to projected ocean deoxygenation under anticipated global warming. These results demonstrate the interplay of sediment and water-column remineralization processes across the OR-WA shelf. As in most shallow marine systems, the two are integral to the ecosystem dynamics and responses to environmental change.
大陆架沉积物是溶解氧(DO)的汇,也是海洋表面初级生产所需的许多主要和次要营养物质的来源,导致底栖生物和远洋生物地球化学循环之间的强烈耦合。在这项研究中,我们提供了配对的底栖生物通量和底水生物地球化学数据,这些数据收集于2017年至2019年期间大约每季度取样一次的两个俄勒冈州大陆架地点,以及位于俄勒冈州中部至华盛顿州南部的其他九个大陆架地点,并于2022年7月或9月取样。底栖生物通量是用一种新的装置来确定的,用于非原位核心孵育。当通量归一化到各自测量的沉积物DO通量时,比率与该地区过去使用原位底栖生物室确定的通量估计比率吻合得很好;然而,非原位通量通常较低。我们的研究结果表明,沉积物是DO和硝酸盐的净汇,也是磷酸盐、硅酸盐和铵的来源。对俄勒冈大陆架表层水沉积物再矿化磷酸盐和硅酸盐相对贡献的估计表明,在最近的夏季上升流季节,大陆架沉积物提供了至少5±7%和37±7%的可用磷酸盐和硅酸盐,在春季分别为2±9%和35±11%。C:N:P:O2的再矿化比率证实了夏季反硝化作用增加,冬季反硝化作用减弱,这是由于水柱含氧量较高,支持了先前的研究。多示踪水质量分析也显示夏季和秋季水柱硝酸盐亏缺增加。根据底栖生物通量估算的底栖生物反硝化速率在0.2至1.8 mmol N m-2 day-1之间,在上升流季节的过去评估范围内。采用一个简单的模型,在假定底栖边界层高度和停留时间的情况下,进一步限制了对底水固定氮(N)损失的贡献,结果表明,尽管沉积物反硝化可以很容易地解释夏季底水的总氮损失,但在一些站点,早期秋季赤字的强度表明了额外的水柱反硝化作用。限制水柱和底栖生物对固定氮赤字的贡献对于了解该地区氮限制初级生产力在预期的全球变暖下如何响应预测的海洋脱氧非常重要。这些结果证明了沉积物和水柱再矿化过程在整个OR-WA大陆架上的相互作用。与大多数浅海系统一样,这两者是生态系统动态和对环境变化的反应的组成部分。
期刊介绍:
Marine Chemistry is an international medium for the publication of original studies and occasional reviews in the field of chemistry in the marine environment, with emphasis on the dynamic approach. The journal endeavours to cover all aspects, from chemical processes to theoretical and experimental work, and, by providing a central channel of communication, to speed the flow of information in this relatively new and rapidly expanding discipline.