Seasonal changes in seawater calcium and alkalinity in the Sargasso Sea and across the Bermuda carbonate platform
Seasonal changes in seawater calcium and alkalinity in the Sargasso Sea and across the Bermuda carbonate platform
Ocean acidification may shift coral reefs from a state of net ecosystem calcification (+NEC) to net ecosystem dissolution (–NEC). Changes in NEC are typically inferred from either measured or calculated total alkalinity (TA) or the dissolved calcium (Ca) to salinity ratio relative to a reference value. The alkalinity anomaly technique has historically been the primary method to estimate NEC due to the greater analytical challenges and uncertainty associated with dissolved Ca measurements in seawater. However, this method assumes that changes in salinity-normalized TA are exclusively the result of calcification and dissolution processes. In many cases, this assumption is valid, but in some environments additional processes can significantly influence seawater TA (e.g., nutrient fluxes and redox processes). Seawater Ca is unaffected or less sensitive to these processes, and therefore, Ca and TA anomalies can be used to estimate absolute or relative changes in NEC with greater confidence. Here, we present a two-year time series of monthly seawater Ca and TA measurements across the Bermuda carbonate platform and the nearby Bermuda Atlantic Time-series Study (BATS) location offshore. High precision Ca measurements (±6 μmol kg
−1) were conducted using an improved spectrophotometric titration system and showed mostly good agreement with changes in TA over the same spatial and temporal scales. Ca and TA measurements across the Bermuda platform showed seasonal fluctuations relative to offshore waters, with +NEC during summer months and near-zero or possible –NEC (net dissolution) during winter months. These seasonal patterns were most pronounced at the inshore locations with the longest residence times (10+ days), which allow stronger biogeochemical signals to develop relative to the offshore source water. Although obtaining high accuracy and precision Ca measurements remains challenging, parallel measurements of Ca and TA from both inshore and offshore waters over a multi-annual timescale could strengthen the validity of predictions for when and where a reef system, such as the Bermuda platform, may shift from +NEC to –NEC.
Carbonate dissolution, Net ecosystem calcification, Seawater alkalinity, Seawater calcium
104064
Griffin, Alyssa J.
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Anderson, Zachary
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Ballard, John
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Bates, Nicholas R.
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Garley, Rebecca
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Johnson, Rod
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Martz, Todd
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Pacheco, Fernando
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Takeshita, Yuichiro
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Andersson, Andreas J.
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20 January 2022
Griffin, Alyssa J.
dd8b408f-4578-476e-a47e-db193c377a40
Anderson, Zachary
cdb7ba0c-720d-4b52-820d-0980ad4d0848
Ballard, John
b66b9c96-fd2f-4f6d-9f7a-2b7576333950
Bates, Nicholas R.
2eb8c60d-41a7-4018-95e7-c02a9e4eb347
Garley, Rebecca
e745b465-9c9b-4b85-995b-a3d4e5af8fd0
Johnson, Rod
b8a98f8d-2893-45a7-88c6-8f455c106944
Martz, Todd
34a9ff6c-638b-4446-8c27-5bb6de47ebf2
Pacheco, Fernando
47c69325-da29-4793-9a2e-7633206109de
Takeshita, Yuichiro
f2bc4c78-4d0d-4d86-8565-ecbd291047f0
Andersson, Andreas J.
b07d71e9-2654-40ba-9c69-0775557bf7de
Griffin, Alyssa J., Anderson, Zachary, Ballard, John, Bates, Nicholas R., Garley, Rebecca, Johnson, Rod, Martz, Todd, Pacheco, Fernando, Takeshita, Yuichiro and Andersson, Andreas J.
(2022)
Seasonal changes in seawater calcium and alkalinity in the Sargasso Sea and across the Bermuda carbonate platform.
Marine Chemistry, 238, , [104064].
(doi:10.1016/j.marchem.2021.104064).
Abstract
Ocean acidification may shift coral reefs from a state of net ecosystem calcification (+NEC) to net ecosystem dissolution (–NEC). Changes in NEC are typically inferred from either measured or calculated total alkalinity (TA) or the dissolved calcium (Ca) to salinity ratio relative to a reference value. The alkalinity anomaly technique has historically been the primary method to estimate NEC due to the greater analytical challenges and uncertainty associated with dissolved Ca measurements in seawater. However, this method assumes that changes in salinity-normalized TA are exclusively the result of calcification and dissolution processes. In many cases, this assumption is valid, but in some environments additional processes can significantly influence seawater TA (e.g., nutrient fluxes and redox processes). Seawater Ca is unaffected or less sensitive to these processes, and therefore, Ca and TA anomalies can be used to estimate absolute or relative changes in NEC with greater confidence. Here, we present a two-year time series of monthly seawater Ca and TA measurements across the Bermuda carbonate platform and the nearby Bermuda Atlantic Time-series Study (BATS) location offshore. High precision Ca measurements (±6 μmol kg
−1) were conducted using an improved spectrophotometric titration system and showed mostly good agreement with changes in TA over the same spatial and temporal scales. Ca and TA measurements across the Bermuda platform showed seasonal fluctuations relative to offshore waters, with +NEC during summer months and near-zero or possible –NEC (net dissolution) during winter months. These seasonal patterns were most pronounced at the inshore locations with the longest residence times (10+ days), which allow stronger biogeochemical signals to develop relative to the offshore source water. Although obtaining high accuracy and precision Ca measurements remains challenging, parallel measurements of Ca and TA from both inshore and offshore waters over a multi-annual timescale could strengthen the validity of predictions for when and where a reef system, such as the Bermuda platform, may shift from +NEC to –NEC.
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More information
Accepted/In Press date: 14 November 2021
e-pub ahead of print date: 19 November 2021
Published date: 20 January 2022
Additional Information:
Funding Information:
This project was supported by the U.S. National Science Foundation (NSF) OCE 14–16518 (AJA, RJ) and OCE 12–55042 (AJA).
Publisher Copyright:
© 2021 Elsevier B.V.
Keywords:
Carbonate dissolution, Net ecosystem calcification, Seawater alkalinity, Seawater calcium
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 453071
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/453071
ISSN: 0304-4203
PURE UUID: 531a27f5-0757-41f4-adf6-0935f0d8b478
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Date deposited: 07 Jan 2022 17:51
Last modified: 05 Jun 2024 19:18
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Author:
Alyssa J. Griffin
Author:
Zachary Anderson
Author:
John Ballard
Author:
Nicholas R. Bates
Author:
Rebecca Garley
Author:
Rod Johnson
Author:
Todd Martz
Author:
Fernando Pacheco
Author:
Yuichiro Takeshita
Author:
Andreas J. Andersson
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