Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
5143608 | Marine Chemistry | 2017 | 7 Pages |
Abstract
Manganese (Mn) is important in seawater as a micronutrient, scavenger (as MnO2) and as a reactant in the redox cycles of many other biologically important elements. In seawater, Mn cycles between oxidized insoluble Mn(III/IV) oxides (MnOx) and soluble Mn (II/III) species (dMnT), which includes Mn(III) complexed to organic ligands (Mn(III)-L) and reduced Mn(II). Mn(III)-L complexes have been shown to be stable in separate oxic, suboxic and anoxic systems, but not in an entire water column with a transition from an oxic to anoxic zone. Additionally, the formation pathways for these complexes have not been well described at one location over a short timescale. In order to better understand these pathways, dissolved and particulate Mn speciation was determined in the water column of the seasonally stratified Chesapeake Bay basin over a 2-day period, using pump profiling for better spatial resolution (10 cm) of redox active species and a modified, low-level spectrophotometric method for soluble Mn speciation (detection limit = 3 nM). Our data suggest that Mn(II) fluxes out of the anoxic sediments (bottom water total Mn: 2.23-3.80 μM; Mn(II) = 61-84% of total Mn) and is oxidized to MnOx at the top of suboxic zone of the water column at non-detectable dO2 levels (â¤Â 3 μM). These biogenic Mn oxides are reduced at the suboxic-anoxic interface via a combination of strong ambient Mn(III)-binding ligands, H2S and/or microbial activity, resulting in the disappearance of MnOx and formation of Mn(III)-L complexes and Mn(II). The oxic water column has lower concentrations of dMnT (0.05-0.18 μM), with Mn(III)-L complexes present in all oxic samples (33-80% of dMnT). The complexes in the oxic water column arise from processes distinct from those occurring in the suboxic and anoxic zones.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Chemistry
Chemistry (General)
Authors
Véronique E. Oldham, Matthew R. Jones, Bradley M. Tebo, George W. III,