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  • Articles  (3)
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  • 1
    Publication Date: 2019-06-14
    Description: Benthic fluxes of dissolved nutrients and oxygen measured in the southern North Sea using ex situ incubation chambers indicate a prominent annual cycle characterized by low level from mid-autumn (Oct) to early spring (Mar) and enhanced values from mid-spring (Apr) to early autumn (Sep) with peak in late summer (late Aug/early Sep). The same cycle is also shown in the budget of total organic carbon (TOC) and macrobenthic biomass in surface sediments. The significant positive correlations between the benthic nutrient fluxes, oxygen, sedimentary TOC and macrobenthos suggest that their variation might respond to a common source, i.e. the primary production. However, the linkages between these quantities and pelagic primary production, which exhibits a dominant bloom in early spring (Mar/Apr) and a secondary bloom in early summer (Jun/Jul) in the study area, is not straightforward. We present a numerical study to unravel the complex linkages. A 3-D coupled hydrodynamic-biogeochemical model (ECOSMO) was used to provide benthic boundary conditions for a 1-D biogeochemical model in the sediment (TOCMAIM) that mechanistically resolves the interaction between macrobenthos and organic matter through bioturbation. Simulation results based on a satisfactory hindcast from 1948 to 2015 reveal that although the spring algal bloom normally starts in late winter (Feb) and peaks in early spring (Mar/Apr), deposition of labile OC to seafloor is limited in this period due to energetic hydrodynamic conditions. Sedimentation and accumulation of labile OC (originated from fresh planktonic detritus) in seafloor surface sediments are facilitated in summer when wind-waves become weak enough. This drives the blooming of macrobenthos, with peak of biomass in late summer (Aug). Bioturbation intensity, which is dependent upon macrobenthic biomass, community structure as well as local food resource, peaks also in later summer. Enhanced bioturbation and benthic metabolism result in an increased oxygen flux into sediments, promoting remineralization of OC and release of nutrients. The following period (late Sep/Oct) is characterized by low level of pelagic primary production in combination with enhanced wind-waves, which not only reduce the input of labile OC into sediments substantially but also remobilize surface material (sediments and OC) on a major part of the shallow coastal seafloor. Depletion of labile OC in the uppermost centimeters of sediments by a combined effect of erosion, macrobenthic uptake and downward mixing (through bioturbation) accounts for the rapid decline of benthic nutrient fluxes in Oct, which remain low through the stormy winter until the next spring.
    Repository Name: EPIC Alfred Wegener Institut
    Type: Conference , notRev
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  • 2
    Publication Date: 2018-01-22
    Description: A series of multibeam bathymetry surveys revealed the emergence of a large pockmark field in the southeastern North Sea. Covering an area of around 915 km2, up to 1,200 pockmarks per square kilometer have been identified. The time of emergence can be confined to 3 months in autumn 2015, suggesting a very dynamic genesis. The gas source and the trigger for the simultaneous outbreak remain speculative. Subseafloor structures and high methane concentrations of up to 30 mmol/l in sediment pore water samples suggest a source of shallow biogenic methane from the decomposition of post-glacial deposits in a paleo river valley. Storm waves are suggested as the final trigger for the eruption of the gas. Due to the shallow water depths and energetic conditions at the presumed time of eruption, a large fraction of the released gas must have been emitted to the atmosphere. Conservative estimates amount to 5 kt of methane, equivalent to 67% of the annual release from the entire North Sea. These observations most probably describe a reoccurring phenomenon in shallow shelf seas, which may have been overlooked before because of the transient nature of shallow water bedforms and technology limitations of high resolution bathymetric mapping.
    Repository Name: EPIC Alfred Wegener Institut
    Type: Article , isiRev
    Format: application/pdf
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  • 3
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    ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
    In:  EPIC3Journal of Sea Research, ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV, ISSN: 1385-1101
    Publication Date: 2021-01-26
    Description: Denitrification on continental margins and in coastal sediments is a major sink of reactive N in the present nitrogen cycle and a major ecosystem service of eutrophied coastal waters. We analyzed the nitrate removal in surface sediments of the Elbe estuary, Wadden Sea, and adjacent German Bight (SE North Sea) during two seasons (spring and summer) along a eutrophication gradient ranging from a high riverine nitrate oncentrations at the Elbe Estuary to offshore areas with low nitrate concentrations. The gradient encompassed the full range of sediment types and organic carbon concentrations of the southern North Sea. Based on nitrate penetration depth and concentration gradient in the porewater we estimated benthic nitrate consumption rates assuming either diffusive transport in cohesive sediments or advective transport in permeable sediments. For the latter we derived a mechanistic model of porewater flow. During the peak nitrate discharge of the river Elbe in March, the highest rates of diffusive nitrate uptake were observed in muddy sediments (up to 2.8 mmol m−2 d−1). The highest advective uptake rate in that period was observed in permeable sediment and was tenfold higher (up to 32 mmol m−2 d−1). The intensity of both diffusive and advective nitrate consumption dropped with the nitrate availability and thus decreased from the Elbe estuary towards offshore stations, and were further decreased during late summer (minimum nitrate discharge) compared to late winter (maximum nitrate discharge). In summary, our rate measurements indicate that the permeable sediment accounts for up to 90% of the total benthic reactive nitrogen consumption in the study area due to the high efficiency of advective nitrate transport into permeable sediment. Extrapolating the averaged nitrate consumption of different sediment classes to the areas of Elbe Estuary, Wadden Sea and eastern German Bight amounts to an N-loss of 3.1 ∗ 106 mol N d−1 from impermeable, diffusion-controlled sediment, and 5.2 ∗ 107 mol N d−1 from permeable sediment with porewater advection.
    Repository Name: EPIC Alfred Wegener Institut
    Type: Article , isiRev
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