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The influence of tides on the marine carbonate chemistry of a coastal polynya in the south-eastern Weddell Sea

The influence of tides on the marine carbonate chemistry of a coastal polynya in the south-eastern Weddell Sea
The influence of tides on the marine carbonate chemistry of a coastal polynya in the south-eastern Weddell Sea
Tides significantly affect polar coastlines by modulating ice shelf melt and modifying shelf water properties through transport and mixing. However, the effect of tides on the marine carbonate chemistry in such regions, especially around Antarctica, remains largely unexplored. We address this topic with two case studies in a coastal polynya in the south-eastern Weddell Sea, neighbouring the Ekström Ice Shelf. The case studies were conducted in January 2015 (PS89) and January 2019 (PS117), capturing semi-diurnal oscillations in the water column. These are pronounced in both physical and biogeochemical variables for PS89. During rising tide, advection of sea ice meltwater from the north-east created a fresher, warmer, and more deeply mixed water column with lower dissolved inorganic carbon (DIC) and total alkalinity (TA) content. During ebbing tide, water from underneath the ice shelf decreased the polynya's temperature, increased the DIC and TA content, and created a more stratified water column. The variability during the PS117 case study was much smaller, as it had less sea ice meltwater input during rising tide and was better mixed with sub-ice shelf water. The contrasts in the variability between the two case studies could be wind and sea ice driven, and they underline the complexity and highly dynamic nature of the system.

The variability in the polynya induced by the tides results in an air–sea CO2 flux that can range between a strong sink (−24 mmol m−2 d−1) and a small source (3 mmol m−2 d−1) on a semi-diurnal timescale. If the variability induced by tides is not taken into account, there is a potential risk of overestimating the polynya's CO2 uptake by 67 % or underestimating it by 73 %, compared to the average flux determined over several days. Depending on the timing of limited sampling, the polynya may appear to be a source or a sink of CO2. Given the disproportionate influence of polynyas on heat and carbon exchange in polar oceans, we recommend future studies around the Antarctic and Arctic coastlines to consider the timing of tidal currents in their sampling strategies and analyses. This will help constrain variability in oceanographic measurements and avoid potential biases in our understanding of these highly complex systems.
1812-0792
1293-1320
Droste, Elise S.
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Hoppema, Mario
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González-Dávila, Melchor
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Santana-Casiano, Juana Magdalena
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Queste, Bastien Y.
126304a1-66b4-414c-a1dd-5e1dad91cff7
Dall'Olmo, Giorgio
750b5877-c8da-4ba0-8ba8-444069f778cc
Venables, Hugh J.
ed72170e-cf1b-4b38-b5e8-d3eed65cdb06
Rohardt, Gerd
c8eacfa1-8c43-42bf-b361-9d74586e9d43
Ossebaar, Sharyn
bfb5be5e-1e7b-43ce-a797-2f659d86ab9a
Schuller, Daniel
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Trace-Kleeberg, Sunke Macarena
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Bakker, Dorothee C.E.
45bd5b18-a7c0-4343-9972-c2e451bf773e
Droste, Elise S.
926ae593-c50b-4bb5-be3f-5ce98eaf37e7
Hoppema, Mario
6f021392-ab2f-4167-8cb0-016b601d392e
González-Dávila, Melchor
4253f234-7c8a-45c8-8db4-c6ba462ec288
Santana-Casiano, Juana Magdalena
3c136b5c-8627-4378-a8a8-a9e94907f728
Queste, Bastien Y.
126304a1-66b4-414c-a1dd-5e1dad91cff7
Dall'Olmo, Giorgio
750b5877-c8da-4ba0-8ba8-444069f778cc
Venables, Hugh J.
ed72170e-cf1b-4b38-b5e8-d3eed65cdb06
Rohardt, Gerd
c8eacfa1-8c43-42bf-b361-9d74586e9d43
Ossebaar, Sharyn
bfb5be5e-1e7b-43ce-a797-2f659d86ab9a
Schuller, Daniel
b7d8109a-4f4d-4188-9831-ebef6d503650
Trace-Kleeberg, Sunke Macarena
ee08806e-f112-4638-8de4-07692b2c0087
Bakker, Dorothee C.E.
45bd5b18-a7c0-4343-9972-c2e451bf773e

Droste, Elise S., Hoppema, Mario, González-Dávila, Melchor, Santana-Casiano, Juana Magdalena, Queste, Bastien Y., Dall'Olmo, Giorgio, Venables, Hugh J., Rohardt, Gerd, Ossebaar, Sharyn, Schuller, Daniel, Trace-Kleeberg, Sunke Macarena and Bakker, Dorothee C.E. (2022) The influence of tides on the marine carbonate chemistry of a coastal polynya in the south-eastern Weddell Sea. Ocean Science, 18 (5), 1293-1320. (doi:10.5194/os-18-1293-2022).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Tides significantly affect polar coastlines by modulating ice shelf melt and modifying shelf water properties through transport and mixing. However, the effect of tides on the marine carbonate chemistry in such regions, especially around Antarctica, remains largely unexplored. We address this topic with two case studies in a coastal polynya in the south-eastern Weddell Sea, neighbouring the Ekström Ice Shelf. The case studies were conducted in January 2015 (PS89) and January 2019 (PS117), capturing semi-diurnal oscillations in the water column. These are pronounced in both physical and biogeochemical variables for PS89. During rising tide, advection of sea ice meltwater from the north-east created a fresher, warmer, and more deeply mixed water column with lower dissolved inorganic carbon (DIC) and total alkalinity (TA) content. During ebbing tide, water from underneath the ice shelf decreased the polynya's temperature, increased the DIC and TA content, and created a more stratified water column. The variability during the PS117 case study was much smaller, as it had less sea ice meltwater input during rising tide and was better mixed with sub-ice shelf water. The contrasts in the variability between the two case studies could be wind and sea ice driven, and they underline the complexity and highly dynamic nature of the system.

The variability in the polynya induced by the tides results in an air–sea CO2 flux that can range between a strong sink (−24 mmol m−2 d−1) and a small source (3 mmol m−2 d−1) on a semi-diurnal timescale. If the variability induced by tides is not taken into account, there is a potential risk of overestimating the polynya's CO2 uptake by 67 % or underestimating it by 73 %, compared to the average flux determined over several days. Depending on the timing of limited sampling, the polynya may appear to be a source or a sink of CO2. Given the disproportionate influence of polynyas on heat and carbon exchange in polar oceans, we recommend future studies around the Antarctic and Arctic coastlines to consider the timing of tidal currents in their sampling strategies and analyses. This will help constrain variability in oceanographic measurements and avoid potential biases in our understanding of these highly complex systems.

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Accepted/In Press date: 27 July 2022
e-pub ahead of print date: 12 September 2022
Published date: 12 September 2022

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 511798
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/511798
ISSN: 1812-0792
PURE UUID: 90323610-98e7-408e-b699-eddb895ae426
ORCID for Sunke Macarena Trace-Kleeberg: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-5980-2492

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Date deposited: 03 Jun 2026 16:32
Last modified: 04 Jun 2026 02:05

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Contributors

Author: Elise S. Droste
Author: Mario Hoppema
Author: Melchor González-Dávila
Author: Juana Magdalena Santana-Casiano
Author: Bastien Y. Queste
Author: Giorgio Dall'Olmo
Author: Hugh J. Venables
Author: Gerd Rohardt
Author: Sharyn Ossebaar
Author: Daniel Schuller
Author: Dorothee C.E. Bakker

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