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  • 2020-2024  (28)
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  • 1
    Publication Date: 2023-02-10
    Description: For millennia humans have gravitated towards coastlines for their resource potential and as geopolitical centres for global trade. A basic requirement ensuring water security for coastal communities relies on a delicate balance between the supply and demand of potable water. The interaction between freshwater and saltwater in coastal settings is, therefore, complicated by both natural and human-driven environmental changes at the land-sea interface. In particular, ongoing sea level rise, warming and deoxygenation might exacerbate such perturbations. In this context, an improved understanding of the nature and variability of groundwater fluxes across the land-sea continuum is timely, yet remains out of reach. The flow of terrestrial groundwater across the coastal transition zone as well as the extent of freshened groundwater below the present-day seafloor are receiving increased attention in marine and coastal sciences because they likely represent a significant, yet highly uncertain component of (bio)geochemical budgets, and because of the emerging interest in the potential use of offshore freshened groundwater as a resource. At the same time, “reverse” groundwater flux from offshore to onshore is of prevalent socio-economic interest as terrestrial groundwater resources are continuously pressured by overpumping and seawater intrusion in many coastal regions worldwide. An accurate assessment of the land-ocean connectivity through groundwater and its potential responses to future anthropogenic activities and climate change will require a multidisciplinary approach combining the expertise of geophysicists, hydrogeologists, (bio)geochemists and modellers. Such joint activities will lay the scientific basis for better understanding the role of groundwater in societal-relevant issues such as climate change, pollution and the environmental status of the coastal oceans within the framework of the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals. Here, we present our perspectives on future research directions to better understand land-ocean connectivity through groundwater, including the spatial distributions of the essential hydrogeological parameters, highlighting technical and scientific developments, and briefly discussing its societal relevance in rapidly changing coastal oceans.
    Type: Article , NonPeerReviewed , info:eu-repo/semantics/article
    Format: text
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  • 2
    Publication Date: 2023-02-08
    Description: The coastal ocean is strongly affected by ocean acidification because of its shallow water depths, low volume, and the closeness to terrestrial dynamics. Earlier observations of dissolved inorganic carbon (DIC) and total alkalinity (TA) in the southern part of the North Sea, a northwest European shelf sea, revealed lower acidification effects than expected. It has been assumed that anaerobic degradation and subsequent TA release in the adjacent back-barrier tidal areas (Wadden Sea) in summertime is responsible for this phenomenon. In this study the exchange rates of TA and DIC between the Wadden Sea tidal basins and the North Sea and the consequences for the carbonate system in the German Bight are estimated using a 3D ecosystem model. The aim of this study is to differentiate the various sources contributing to observed high summer TA in the southern North Sea. Measured TA and DIC in the Wadden Sea are considered as model boundary conditions. This procedure acknowledges the dynamic behaviour of the Wadden Sea as an area of effective production and decomposition of organic material. According to the modelling results, 39 Gmol TA yr−1 were exported from the Wadden Sea into the North Sea, which is less than a previous estimate but within a comparable range. The interannual variabilities in TA and DIC, mainly driven by hydrodynamic conditions, were examined for the years 2001–2009. Dynamics in the carbonate system are found to be related to specific weather conditions. The results suggest that the Wadden Sea is an important driver for the carbonate system in the southern North Sea. On average 41 % of TA inventory changes in the German Bight were caused by riverine input, 37 % by net transport from adjacent North Sea sectors, 16 % by Wadden Sea export, and 6 % were caused by internal net production of TA. The dominant role of river input for the TA inventory disappears when focusing on TA concentration changes due to the corresponding freshwater fluxes diluting the marine TA concentrations. The ratio of exported TA versus DIC reflects the dominant underlying biogeochemical processes in the Wadden Sea. Whereas aerobic degradation of organic matter played a key role in the North Frisian Wadden Sea during all seasons of the year, anaerobic degradation of organic matter dominated in the East Frisian Wadden Sea. Despite the scarcity of high-resolution field data, it is shown that anaerobic degradation in the Wadden Sea is one of the main contributors of elevated summer TA values in the southern North Sea.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
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  • 3
    Publication Date: 2024-02-07
    Description: The impact of submarine groundwater discharge (SGD) on coastal sea biogeochemistry has been demonstrated in many recent studies. However, only a few studies have integrated biogeochemical and microbiological analyses, especially at sites with pockmarks of different degrees of groundwater influence. This study investigated biogeochemical processes and microbial community structure in sediment cores from three pockmarks in Hanko, Finland, in the northern Baltic Sea. Pockmark data were supplemented by groundwater and seawater measurements. Two active pockmarks showed SGD rates of 0.02 cm d−1 and 0.31 cm d−1, respectively, based on porewater Cl− profiles, while a third pockmark had no SGD influence. Reactive transport modelling (RTM) established that the porewater systems of these active pockmarks are dominated by advection, resulting in the focusing of biogeochemical reactions and the microbial community into a thin zone at the sediment surface. The advection further reduces the accumulation of organic matter in the surface sediments, resulting in the absence of a sulfate-methane transition zone (SMTZ) at these pockmarks. Furthermore, the RTM estimated low rates of consumption of SO42−, and low rates of production of CH4, NH4+, DIC at the active pockmarks. Archaeal communities in the active pockmarks were dominated by ammonia-oxidizing archaea of predominantly groundwater origin. In contrast, at the inactive pockmark, the lack of SGD has permitted rapid deposition of organic-rich mud. The porewater system in the inactive pockmark is dominated by diffusion, leading to orders of magnitude higher metabolite concentrations at depth compared to the active pockmarks. The biogeochemical environment in the inactive pockmark resembles typical organic-rich mud seafloor in the area, with sulphate reduction and methanogenesis dominating organic matter remineralization. Accordingly, methanogens dominate the archaeal community, whereas sulfate reducers dominate the bacterial community. RTM results suggest that sulfate-mediated anaerobic oxidation of methane (S-AOM) also occurs at this site. Although depth-integrated fluxes of SO42−, CH4, NH4, DIC at the inactive pockmark are orders of magnitude higher compared to the active pockmarks, processes at the inactive pockmark represent internal recycling in the coastal sea. Fluxes observed at the active pockmarks, although comparatively small in magnitude, are partly influenced by external inputs to the sea through SGD. Hence, effluxes across the sediment–water interface at these sites partly represent direct external fluxes to the marine environment, in addition to diagenetic recycling at the benthic interface. The study highlights that SGD can result in significant spatial heterogeneity of biogeochemical processes and microbial community structure in the coastal zone, and that the overall effects of SGD and associated solute fluxes at an SGD site are a function of the number of pockmarks, the rate of SGD, and the ratio of active to inactive pockmarks.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed , info:eu-repo/semantics/article
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  • 4
    Publication Date: 2024-02-07
    Description: For millennia, humans have gravitated towards coastlines for their resource potential and as geopolitical centres for global trade. A basic requirement ensuring water security for coastal communities relies on a delicate balance between the supply and demand of potable water. The interaction between freshwater and saltwater in coastal settings is, therefore, complicated by both natural and human-driven environmental changes at the land-sea interface. In particular, ongoing sea level rise, warming and deoxygenation might exacerbate such perturbations. In this context, an improved understanding of the nature and variability of groundwater fluxes across the land-sea continuum is timely, yet remains out of reach. The flow of terrestrial groundwater across the coastal transition zone as well as the extent of freshened groundwater below the present-day seafloor are receiving increased attention in marine and coastal sciences because they likely represent a significant, yet highly uncertain component of (bio)geochemical budgets, and because of the emerging interest in the potential use of offshore freshened groundwater as a resource. At the same time, “reverse” groundwater flux from offshore to onshore is of prevalent socio-economic interest as terrestrial groundwater resources are continuously pressured by overpumping and seawater intrusion in many coastal regions worldwide. An accurate assessment of the land-ocean connectivity through groundwater and its potential responses to future anthropogenic activities and climate change will require a multidisciplinary approach combining the expertise of geophysicists, hydrogeologists, (bio)geochemists and modellers. Such joint activities will lay the scientific basis for better understanding the role of groundwater in societal-relevant issues such as climate change, pollution and the environmental status of the coastal oceans within the framework of the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals. Here, we present our perspectives on future research directions to better understand land-ocean connectivity through groundwater, including the spatial distributions of the essential hydrogeological parameters, highlighting technical and scientific developments, and briefly discussing its societal relevance in rapidly changing coastal oceans.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed , info:eu-repo/semantics/article
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  • 5
    Publication Date: 2024-02-14
    Description: Subterranean estuaries are connective zones between inland aquifers and the open sea where terrestrial freshwater and circulating seawater mix and undergo major biogeochemical changes. They are biogeochemical reactors that modify groundwater chemistry prior to discharge into the sea. We propose that subterranean estuaries of high-energy beaches are particularly dynamic environments, where the effect of the dynamic boundary conditions propagates tens of meters into the subsurface, leading to strong spatio-temporal variability of geochemical conditions. We hypothesize that they form a unique habitat with an adapted microbial community unlike other typically more stable subsurface environments. So far, however, studies concerning subterranean estuaries of high-energy beaches have been rare and therefore their functioning, and their importance for coastal ecosystems, as well as for carbon, nutrient and trace element cycling, is little understood. We are addressing this knowledge gap within the interdisciplinary research project DynaDeep by studying the combined effect of surface (hydro- and morphodynamics) on subsurface processes (groundwater flow and transport, biogeochemical reactions, microbiology). A unique subterranean estuary observatory was established on the northern beach of the island of Spiekeroog facing the North Sea, serving as an exemplary high-energy research site and model system. It consists of fixed and permanent infrastructure such as a pole with measuring devices, multi-level groundwater wells and an electrode chain. This forms the base for autonomous measurements, regular repeated sampling, interdisciplinary field campaigns and experimental work, all of which are integrated via mathematical modelling to understand and quantify the functioning of the biogeochemical reactor. First results show that the DynaDeep observatory is collecting the intended spatially and temporally resolved morphological, sedimentological and biogeochemical data. Samples and data are further processed ex-situ and combined with experiments and modelling. Ultimately, DynaDeep aims at elucidating the global relevance of these common but overlooked environments.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
    Format: text
    Format: video
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  • 6
    Publication Date: 2023-03-14
    Description: The redox-sensitive metals Mn, Fe, U, Re, Mo, and V and sulfur cycling were studied within the subterranean estuary of a sand beach on Spiekeroog Island, Northern Germany. Pore water samples were obtained along a cross-shore transect down to 5 m below the sediment surface. Redox conditions range from oxic, close to the base of the dune, to sub- to anoxic towards the low water line. We could show that biogeochemical processes alter not only the pore water concentrations of the trace metals, but are also reflected by the O isotope- and to a minor degree the S isotope composition of dissolved sulfate. Seawater circulation through sediments of the upper beach (duneward part of the intertidal zone) removes U and V from solution, but serves as a source for Mn, Fe, Re, and Mo to the ocean. Pore water discharging from a berm close to the low water line exhibits lower U, V, and Re concentrations than adjacent seawater. This part of the beach thus serves as a sink for U, V, and Re, but as a source for Mn, Fe, and Mo. No significant Mo depletion is found in the pore water, due to the lack of dissolved sulfide.
    Keywords: Calculated; Conductivity probe; DEPTH, sediment/rock; Distance; ELEVATION; Event label; Hydrogen sulfide; ICP-MS; ICP-OES/ICP-MS; Ion chromatography; Iron; LATITUDE; LONGITUDE; Manganese; Molybdenum; Nitrate; Oxygen isotopes; pH; Photometric; Rhenium; Salinity; Spiekeroog_beach_May_2014; Spiekeroog_CloseToBeach_May_2014; Station label; Sulfate; Sulfur isotopes; Uranium; UTM Easting, Universal Transverse Mercator; UTM Northing, Universal Transverse Mercator; UTM Zone, Universal Transverse Mercator; Vanadium; Water sample; WS; δ18O, sulfate; δ18O, water; δ34S, sulfate
    Type: Dataset
    Format: text/tab-separated-values, 618 data points
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  • 7
    Publication Date: 2023-03-21
    Description: Beach porewater and streams at the coastline of Wismar Bay (Germany), southern Baltic Sea were investigated to evaluate the impact of diagenetic element fluxes and different fresh water sources, including submarine groundwater discharge, on the water column of the Wismar Bay (Germany), southern Baltic Sea. Beach porewater at five different sites between 0.4-1.8 m depth was extracted using push-point lances in July-August 2019. In addition, surface waters from four streams draining into the Wismar Bay were sampled at the mixing zone with the Baltic Sea. Both beach porewater and surface waters were analyzed for dissolved concentrations of major and trace elements and selected nutrients using ICP-OES (iCAP, 7400, Duo Thermo Fischer Scientific), dissolved inorganic carbon (DIC) and δ13CDIC by means of Isotope-ratio-monitoring gas mass spectrometry (MAT 253 coupled to a Gasbench II), and δ18OH2O, δ2HH2O using a CRDS system (laser cavity-ring-down-spectroscopy, Picarro L2140- I), and radium isotopes (223Ra, 224Ra) by radium-delayed coincidence counters (RaDeCC).
    Keywords: Barium; Calcium; Carbon, inorganic, dissolved; Cavity ring-down spectroscopy; Chloride; CRDS; DAM sustainMare - MGF Baltic Sea: Exclusion of mobile bottom-contact fishing in marine protected areas of the German Exclusive Economic Zone of the Baltic Sea; DATE/TIME; DEPTH, water; Event label; Handylab LF 11; Hydrochemistry; ICP-OES, Thermo Fisher iCAP 7400; Iron; LATITUDE; LONGITUDE; Magnesium; Manganese; Mass spectrometer; MGF_Baltic_Sea; MSPEC; Phosphorus; Potassium; Potentiometric titration; Radium-223; Radium-224; Radium-224 excess; Radium delayed coincidence counter, Scientific Computer Instrument; Research Mission of the German Marine Research Alliance (DAM): Protection and sustainable use of marine areas; Salinity; Silicon; Sodium; southern Baltic Sea; SSPP; Stable isotopes (HCO); stainless steel push-point lancet; Strontium; Sulfur; Surface water sample; sustainMare; SWS; Type; WB_End-member-1; WB_End-member-2; WB_End-member-3; WB_End-member-4; WB_End-member-5; WB_Stream-1; WB_Stream-2; WB_Stream-3; WB_Stream-4; WB_Stream-5; Wismar Bay; δ13C, dissolved inorganic carbon; δ18O, water; δ Deuterium, water
    Type: Dataset
    Format: text/tab-separated-values, 210 data points
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  • 8
    Publication Date: 2023-03-21
    Description: The aim of this investigation is to characterize the composition of typical fresh groundwater at the shoreline of the Baltic Sea. The fresh waters escaping from beach springs in Meschendorf (Germany), at the southern Baltic Sea, were analyzed for major and trace elements and selected nutrients using ICP-OES (iCAP, 7400, Duo Thermo Fischer Scientific), dissolved inorganic carbon (DIC) and δ13CDIC using a Gas mass spectrometre (MAT 253) coupled to a Gasbench II, and δ18OH2O, δ2HH2O using a CRDS system (laser cavity-ring-down-spectroscopy, Picarro L2140- I).
    Keywords: Barium; Calcium; Carbon, inorganic, dissolved; Cavity ring-down spectroscopy; Chloride; CRDS; DATE/TIME; DEPTH, water; Event label; groundwater; ICP-OES, Thermo Fisher iCAP 7400; Iron; LATITUDE; LONGITUDE; Magnesium; Manganese; Mass spectrometer; Meschendorf_spring1; Meschendorf_spring2; Meschendorf_spring3; Meschendorf_spring4; Meschendorf_spring5; Meschendorf_spring6; MSPEC; Phosphorus; Potassium; Potentiometric titration; Silicon; Sodium; southern Baltic Sea; Stable isotopes; Strontium; Sulfur; Type; δ13C, dissolved inorganic carbon; δ18O, water; δ Deuterium, water
    Type: Dataset
    Format: text/tab-separated-values, 82 data points
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  • 9
    Publication Date: 2023-03-21
    Description: Short sediment cores were taken at six stations in Wismar Bay, southern Baltic Sea (Germany) in May 2019 using a Rumohr-Lot device. Our aim in this study was to investigate the role of diagenetic element fluxes and different fresh water sources, including submarine groundwater discharge, on the water column in the bay. Porewaters were extracted from the sediment cores by applying the rhizon technique at a resolution between 2 and 5 cm. The porewaters were analyzed for major and trace metals and selected nutrients using a ICP-OES (iCAP, 7400, Duo Thermo Fischer Scientific), total sulphide by a Specord 40 spectrophotometer (Analytik Jena), dissolved inorganic carbon (DIC) and δ13CDIC using an isotope gas mass spectrometre (MAT 253) coupled to a Gasbench II, and δ18OH2O, and δ2HH2O using a CRDS system (laser cavity-ring-down-spectroscopy, Picarro L2140- I). Sediment cores were further sliced at 2 to 4 cm resolution and each freeze-dried solid subsample was analyzed for contents of total carbon, nitrogen, and sulphur using an Elemental Analyzer (Euro Vector EuroEA 3, 052), inorganic carbon using an Elemental Analyzer multi EA (Analytik Jena), total mercury by a DMA-80 analyzer, and HCl-extractable Pb, Mn and Fe using an ICP-OES (iCAP, 7400, Duo Thermo Fischer Scientific).
    Keywords: Carbon, inorganic, total; Carbon, organic, total; DAM sustainMare - MGF Baltic Sea: Exclusion of mobile bottom-contact fishing in marine protected areas of the German Exclusive Economic Zone of the Baltic Sea; DATE/TIME; Depth, bottom/max; DEPTH, sediment/rock; Depth, top/min; Direct Mercury Analyser DMA (Milestone Instruments); Elemental analyzer; Event label; ICP-OES, Thermo Fisher iCAP 7400; Iron; LATITUDE; Lead; LONGITUDE; Mercury; MGF_Baltic_Sea; Nitrogen; Research Mission of the German Marine Research Alliance (DAM): Protection and sustainable use of marine areas; RL; Rumohr-Lot; southern Baltic Sea; Stable isotope; submarine groundwate discharge; Sulfur; sustainMare; Type; Water content, sediment; WB_Site-10_RL; WB_Site-11_RL; WB_Site-15_RL; WB_Site-2_RL; WB_Site-20_RL; WB_Site-31_RL
    Type: Dataset
    Format: text/tab-separated-values, 662 data points
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  • 10
    Publication Date: 2023-03-21
    Description: Short sediment cores were taken at six stations in Wismar Bay, southern Baltic Sea (Germany) in May 2019 using a Rumohr-Lot device. Our aim in this study was to investigate the role of diagenetic element fluxes and different fresh water sources, including submarine groundwater discharge, on the water column in the bay. Porewaters were extracted from the sediment cores by applying the rhizon technique at a resolution between 2 and 5 cm. The porewaters were analyzed for major and trace metals and selected nutrients using a ICP-OES (iCAP, 7400, Duo Thermo Fischer Scientific), total sulphide by a Specord 40 spectrophotometer (Analytik Jena), dissolved inorganic carbon (DIC) and δ13CDIC using an isotope gas mass spectrometre (MAT 253) coupled to a Gasbench II, and δ18OH2O, and δ2HH2O using a CRDS system (laser cavity-ring-down-spectroscopy, Picarro L2140- I). Sediment cores were further sliced at 2 to 4 cm resolution and each freeze-dried solid subsample was analyzed for contents of total carbon, nitrogen, and sulphur using an Elemental Analyzer (Euro Vector EuroEA 3, 052), inorganic carbon using an Elemental Analyzer multi EA (Analytik Jena), total mercury by a DMA-80 analyzer, and HCl-extractable Pb, Mn and Fe using an ICP-OES (iCAP, 7400, Duo Thermo Fischer Scientific).
    Keywords: Barium; Calcium; Carbon, inorganic, dissolved; Cavity ring-down spectroscopy; CRDS; DAM sustainMare - MGF Baltic Sea: Exclusion of mobile bottom-contact fishing in marine protected areas of the German Exclusive Economic Zone of the Baltic Sea; DATE/TIME; DEPTH, sediment/rock; Event label; Hydrogen sulfide; ICP-OES, Thermo Fisher iCAP 7400; Iron; LATITUDE; LONGITUDE; Magnesium; Manganese; Mass spectrometer (MSPEC); MGF_Baltic_Sea; Phosphorus; Potassium; Refractometer; Research Mission of the German Marine Research Alliance (DAM): Protection and sustainable use of marine areas; RL; Rumohr-Lot; Salinity; Silicon; Sodium; southern Baltic Sea; SPEC; Spectrophotometer; Stable isotope; Station label; Strontium; submarine groundwate discharge; Sulfate; sustainMare; Type; WB_Site-10_RL; WB_Site-11_RL; WB_Site-15_RL; WB_Site-2_RL; WB_Site-20_RL; WB_Site-31_RL; δ13C, dissolved inorganic carbon; δ18O, water; δ Deuterium, water
    Type: Dataset
    Format: text/tab-separated-values, 1514 data points
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