V. Turk, N. Bednaršek, J. Faganeli, B. Gašparović, M. Giani, R. Guerra, N. Kovač, A. Malej, B. Krajnc, D. Melaku Canu, N. Ogrinc
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Based on the comparison of two winter cruises carried out in in the 25-year interval between 1983 and 2008, acidification rate of 0.003 pH<sub>T</sub> units yr<sup>−1</sup> was estimated in the northern Adriatic which is similar to the Mediterranean open waters (with recent estimations of −0.0028 ± 0.0003 units pH<sub>T</sub> yr<sup>−1</sup>) and the surface coastal waters (-0.003 ± 0.001 and -0.0044 ± 0.00006 pH<sub>T</sub> units yr<sup>−1</sup>). The computed Revelle factor for the Adriatic Sea, with the value of about 10, indicates that the buffer capacity is rather high and that the waters should not be particularly exposed to acidification. Total alkalinity (TA) in the Adriatic (2.6-2.7 mM) is in the upper range of TA measured in the Mediterranean Sea because riverine inputs transport carbonates dissolved from the Alpine dolomites and karstic watersheds. The Adriatic Sea is the second sub-basin (319 Gmol yr<sup>-1</sup>), following the Aegean Sea (which receives the TA contribution from the Black Sea), that contribute to the riverine TA discharges into the Mediterranean Sea. About 60% of the TA inflow into the Adriatic Sea is attributed to the Po river discharge with TA of ~3 mM and TA decreases with increasing salinity. Saturation state indicates that the waters of the Adriatic are supersaturated with respect to calcite (Ω<sub>Ca</sub>) and aragonite (Ω<sub>Ar</sub>) throughout the year. However, saturation states are considerably lower in the bottom water layers, due to the prevalence of benthic remineralization processes in the stratification period. The seasonal changes of the chemical and environmental conditions and relatively small size of the Adriatic Sea area the microbial community composition, function (growth, enzymatic activity) and carbon and nitrogen biogeochemical cycles. Significant effects on calcifying organisms and phytoplankton are expected while the effects of possible OA on microbially-driven processes are not known yet.</p>\n","PeriodicalId":12817,"journal":{"name":"Goldschmidt Abstracts","volume":"66 1","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2020-03-09","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Carbonate System and Acidification of the Adriatic Sea\",\"authors\":\"V. Turk, N. Bednaršek, J. Faganeli, B. Gašparović, M. Giani, R. Guerra, N. Kovač, A. Malej, B. Krajnc, D. Melaku Canu, N. Ogrinc\",\"doi\":\"10.5194/egusphere-egu2020-10977\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"\\n <p>Although the marginal seas represent only 7% of the total ocean area, the CO<sub>2</sub> fluxes are intensive and important for the carbon budget, exposing to an intense process of anthropogenic ocean acidification (OA). 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However, saturation states are considerably lower in the bottom water layers, due to the prevalence of benthic remineralization processes in the stratification period. The seasonal changes of the chemical and environmental conditions and relatively small size of the Adriatic Sea area the microbial community composition, function (growth, enzymatic activity) and carbon and nitrogen biogeochemical cycles. 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引用次数: 0
摘要
虽然边缘海仅占海洋总面积的7%,但二氧化碳通量非常密集,对碳收支非常重要,暴露在强烈的人为海洋酸化过程中。pH值的下降,特别是在河口水域,也是由富营养化引起的酸化造成的。亚得里亚海目前是一个二氧化碳汇,年通量约为-1.2至-3 mol C - m-2年-1,是地中海西北部净汇率(-4至-5 mol C - m-2年-1)的两倍。根据1983年至2008年25年间进行的两次冬季巡航的比较,亚得里亚海北部的酸化率估计为0.003 pHT单位/年,与地中海开放水域相似(最近的估计为0.0028 pHT单位/年)。0.0003单位pHT年−1)和表层沿海水域(-0.003 ±0.001和-0.0044 ±0.00006 pHT单位年−1)。计算亚得里亚海的Revelle因子约为10,表明缓冲能力相当高,海水不应特别暴露于酸化。亚得里亚海的总碱度(TA) (2.6-2.7 mM)在地中海测得的TA的上限范围内,因为河流输入输送了阿尔卑斯白云岩和岩溶流域溶解的碳酸盐。亚得里亚海是继爱琴海(从黑海接收TA的贡献)之后的第二个子盆地(319 Gmol /年),这有助于向地中海排放河流TA。亚得里亚海约60%的TA流入来自Po河,TA为~3 mM, TA随盐度的增加而减少。饱和状态表明亚得里亚海水域全年方解石(ΩCa)和文石(ΩAr)含量过饱和。然而,由于分层期底栖生物再矿化过程的盛行,底层水层的饱和状态要低得多。分析了亚得里亚海地区化学环境条件和相对较小面积的季节性变化对微生物群落组成、功能(生长、酶活性)和碳氮生物地球化学循环的影响。预计会对钙化生物和浮游植物产生重大影响,而OA对微生物驱动过程的可能影响尚不清楚。
Carbonate System and Acidification of the Adriatic Sea
Although the marginal seas represent only 7% of the total ocean area, the CO2 fluxes are intensive and important for the carbon budget, exposing to an intense process of anthropogenic ocean acidification (OA). A decline in pH, especially in the estuarine waters, results also from the eutrophication-induced acidification. The Adriatic Sea is currently a CO2 sink with an annual flux of approximately -1.2 to -3 mol C m-2 yr-1 which is twice as low compared to the net sink rates in the NW Mediterranean (-4 to -5 mol C m-2 yr-1). Based on the comparison of two winter cruises carried out in in the 25-year interval between 1983 and 2008, acidification rate of 0.003 pHT units yr−1 was estimated in the northern Adriatic which is similar to the Mediterranean open waters (with recent estimations of −0.0028 ± 0.0003 units pHT yr−1) and the surface coastal waters (-0.003 ± 0.001 and -0.0044 ± 0.00006 pHT units yr−1). The computed Revelle factor for the Adriatic Sea, with the value of about 10, indicates that the buffer capacity is rather high and that the waters should not be particularly exposed to acidification. Total alkalinity (TA) in the Adriatic (2.6-2.7 mM) is in the upper range of TA measured in the Mediterranean Sea because riverine inputs transport carbonates dissolved from the Alpine dolomites and karstic watersheds. The Adriatic Sea is the second sub-basin (319 Gmol yr-1), following the Aegean Sea (which receives the TA contribution from the Black Sea), that contribute to the riverine TA discharges into the Mediterranean Sea. About 60% of the TA inflow into the Adriatic Sea is attributed to the Po river discharge with TA of ~3 mM and TA decreases with increasing salinity. Saturation state indicates that the waters of the Adriatic are supersaturated with respect to calcite (ΩCa) and aragonite (ΩAr) throughout the year. However, saturation states are considerably lower in the bottom water layers, due to the prevalence of benthic remineralization processes in the stratification period. The seasonal changes of the chemical and environmental conditions and relatively small size of the Adriatic Sea area the microbial community composition, function (growth, enzymatic activity) and carbon and nitrogen biogeochemical cycles. Significant effects on calcifying organisms and phytoplankton are expected while the effects of possible OA on microbially-driven processes are not known yet.