Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
6384001 | Deep Sea Research Part II: Topical Studies in Oceanography | 2016 | 10 Pages |
Abstract
We investigated rates of total oxygen uptake (TOU) sulfate reduction (SRR), and benthic nutrient flux (BNF) in sediments of polynya (730-825 m water depth), ice shelf (1064 m water depth), and marginal sea-ice zone (530 m water depth) to evaluate the role of benthic mineralization in degrading organic material produced by primary production in the Amundsen Sea polynya (ASP), Antarctica. Despite high primary production (110 mmol C mâ2 dâ1) in the water column, benthic carbon mineralization in the ASP (average, 2.1±0.3 mmol C mâ2 dâ1) was strikingly lower than in other less productive polar regions, accounting for only 1.9% of primary production. Low sediment accumulation rates (0.18-0.20 cm yrâ1) and sinking fluxes of organic matter likely caused the low oxygen consumption rates (2.44-3.11 mmol mâ2 dâ1) and low effluxes of dissolved inorganic nitrogen (0.12-0.13 mmol mâ2 dâ1) and phosphate (0.017-0.018 mmol mâ2 dâ1) in the ASP. Carbon oxidation by sulfate reduction (0.11-0.19 mmol C mâ2 dâ1) comprised only 10% of total benthic mineralization, indicating that anaerobic C oxidation plays a minor role in total C oxidation. Our results, including low sediment accumulation rates and benthic metabolic rates, suggest that most organic carbon produced by Phaeocystis blooms would be respired to CO2 in the water column, and thus the organic carbon reaching the sediment is not adequate to stimulate benthic metabolism in the ASP.
Keywords
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Earth and Planetary Sciences
Geology
Authors
Sung-Han Kim, Ayeon Choi, Eun Jin Yang, SangHoon Lee, Jung-Ho Hyun,