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  • Copernicus Publications (EGU)  (3)
  • 2020-2023
  • 2010-2014  (3)
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  • 1
    Publication Date: 2019-09-23
    Description: This study presents benthic data from 12 samplings from February to December 2010 in a 28 m deep channel in the southwest Baltic Sea. In winter, the distribution of solutes in the porewater was strongly modulated by bioirrigation which efficiently flushed the upper 10 cm of sediment, leading to concentrations which varied little from bottom water values. Solute pumping by bioirrigation fell sharply in the summer as the bottom waters became severely hypoxic (〈 2 μM O2). At this point the giant sulfide-oxidizing bacteria Beggiatoa was visible on surface sediments. Despite an increase in O2 following mixing of the water column in November, macrofauna remained absent until the end of the sampling. Contrary to expectations, metabolites such as dissolved inorganic carbon, ammonium and hydrogen sulfide did not accumulate in the upper 10 cm during the hypoxic period when bioirrigation was absent, but instead tended toward bottom water values. This was taken as evidence for episodic bubbling of methane gas out of the sediment acting as an abiogenic irrigation process. Porewater–seawater mixing by escaping bubbles provides a pathway for enhanced nutrient release to the bottom water and may exacerbate the feedback with hypoxia. Subsurface dissolved phosphate (TPO4) peaks in excess of 400 μM developed in autumn, resulting in a very large diffusive TPO4 flux to the water column of 0.7 ± 0.2 mmol m−2 d−1. The model was not able to simulate this TPO4 source as release of iron-bound P (Fe–P) or organic P. As an alternative hypothesis, the TPO4 peak was reproduced using new kinetic expressions that allow Beggiatoa to take up porewater TPO4 and accumulate an intracellular P pool during periods with oxic bottom waters. TPO4 is then released during hypoxia, as previous published results with sulfide-oxidizing bacteria indicate. The TPO4 added to the porewater over the year by organic P and Fe–P is recycled through Beggiatoa, meaning that no additional source of TPO4 is needed to explain the TPO4 peak. Further experimental studies are needed to strengthen this conclusion and rule out Fe–P and organic P as candidate sources of ephemeral TPO4 release. A measured C/P ratio of 〈 20 for the diffusive flux to the water column during hypoxia directly demonstrates preferential release of P relative to C under oxygen-deficient bottom waters. This coincides with a strong decrease in dissolved inorganic N/P ratios in the water column to ~ 1. Our results suggest that sulfide oxidizing bacteria could act as phosphorus capacitors in systems with oscillating redox conditions, releasing massive amounts of TPO4 in a short space of time and dramatically increasing the internal loading of TPO4 to the overlying water.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed , info:eu-repo/semantics/article
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  • 2
    Publication Date: 2019-09-23
    Description: Subduction of the oceanic Cocos plate offshore Costa Rica causes strong advection of methane-charged fluids. Presented here are the first direct measurements of microbial anaerobic oxidation of methane (AOM) and sulfate reduction (SR) rates in sediments from the two mounds, applying radiotracer techniques in combination with numerical modeling. In addition, analysis of carbonate δ18O, δ13C, and 87Sr / 86Sr signatures constrain the origin of the carbonate-precipitating fluid. Average rates of microbial activities showed differences with a factor of 4.8 to 6.3 between Mound 11 [AOM 140.71 (±40.84 SD); SR 117.25 (±82.06 SD) mmol m−2 d−1, respectively] and Mound 12 [AOM 22.37 (±0.85 SD); SR 23.99 (±5.79 SD) mmol m−2 d−1, respectively]. Modeling results yielded flow velocities of 50 cm a−1 at Mound 11 and 8–15 cm a−1 at Mound 12. Analysis of oxygen and carbon isotope variations of authigenic carbonates from the two locations revealed higher values for Mound 11 (δ18O: 4.7 to 5.9‰, δ13C: −21.0 to −29.6‰), compared to Mound 12 (δ18O: 4.1 to 4.5‰, δ13C: −45.7 to −48.9‰). Analysis of carbonates 87Sr / 86Sr indicated temporal changes of deep-source fluid admixture at Mound 12. The present study is in accordance with previous work supporting considerable differences of methane flux between the two Mounds. It also strengthens the hypothesis of a predominantly deep fluid source for Mound 11 versus a rather shallow source of biogenic methane for Mound 12. The results demonstrate that methane-driven microbial activity is a valid ground truthing tool for geophysical measurements of fluid advection and constraining of recent methane fluxes in the study area. The study further shows that the combination of microbial rate measurements, numerical modeling, and authigenic carbonate analysis provide a suitable approach to constrain temporal and spatial variations of methane charged fluid flow at the Pacific Costa Rican margin.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
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  • 3
    Publication Date: 2019-09-23
    Description: In this paper we provide an overview of new knowledge on oxygen depletion (hypoxia) and related phenomena in aquatic systems resulting from the EU-FP7 project HYPOX ("In situ monitoring of oxygen depletion in hypoxic ecosystems of coastal and open seas, and landlocked water bodies", www.hypox.net). In view of the anticipated oxygen loss in aquatic systems due to eutrophication and climate change, HYPOX was set up to improve capacities to monitor hypoxia as well as to understand its causes and consequences. Temporal dynamics and spatial patterns of hypoxia were analyzed in field studies in various aquatic environments, including the Baltic Sea, the Black Sea, Scottish and Scandinavian fjords, Ionian Sea lagoons and embayments, and Swiss lakes. Examples of episodic and rapid (hours) occurrences of hypoxia, as well as seasonal changes in bottom-water oxygenation in stratified systems, are discussed. Geologically driven hypoxia caused by gas seepage is demonstrated. Using novel technologies, temporal and spatial patterns of water-column oxygenation, from basin-scale seasonal patterns to meter-scale sub-micromolar oxygen distributions, were resolved. Existing multidecadal monitoring data were used to demonstrate the imprint of climate change and eutrophication on long-term oxygen distributions. Organic and inorganic proxies were used to extend investigations on past oxygen conditions to centennial and even longer timescales that cannot be resolved by monitoring. The effects of hypoxia on faunal communities and biogeochemical processes were also addressed in the project. An investigation of benthic fauna is presented as an example of hypoxia-devastated benthic communities that slowly recover upon a reduction in eutrophication in a system where naturally occurring hypoxia overlaps with anthropogenic hypoxia. Biogeochemical investigations reveal that oxygen intrusions have a strong effect on the microbially mediated redox cycling of elements. Observations and modeling studies of the sediments demonstrate the effect of seasonally changing oxygen conditions on benthic mineralization pathways and fluxes. Data quality and access are crucial in hypoxia research. Technical issues are therefore also addressed, including the availability of suitable sensor technology to resolve the gradual changes in bottom-water oxygen in marine systems that can be expected as a result of climate change. Using cabled observatories as examples, we show how the benefit of continuous oxygen monitoring can be maximized by adopting proper quality control. Finally, we discuss strategies for state-of-the-art data archiving and dissemination in compliance with global standards, and how ocean observations can contribute to global earth observation attempts.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed , info:eu-repo/semantics/article
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