Organic Carbon Origin, Benthic Faunal Consumption, and Burial in Sediments of Northern Atlantic and Arctic Fjords (60-81°N)

被引:39
作者
Wlodarska-Kowalczuk, Maria [1 ]
Mazurkiewicz, Mikolaj [1 ]
Gorska, Barbara [1 ]
Michel, Loic N. [2 ,3 ]
Jankowska, Emilia [1 ]
Zaborska, Agata [1 ]
机构
[1] Polish Acad Sci, Inst Oceanol, Sopot, Poland
[2] Univ Liege, Lab Oceanol Freshwater & Ocean Sci Unit Res FOCUS, Liege, Belgium
[3] IFREMER, Ctr Bretagne, REM EEP, Lab Environm Profond, Plouzane, France
关键词
s; organic matter preservation; organic carbon sequestration; benthic carbon mineralization; sedimentary processes; early diagenesis; marine geochemistry; MARINE-SEDIMENTS; ENVIRONMENTAL-CHANGES; MATTER PRESERVATION; WEST SPITSBERGEN; SHELF SEDIMENTS; YOUNG SOUND; IN-SITU; PHYTOPLANKTON; ECOSYSTEM; SVALBARD;
D O I
10.1029/2019JG005140
中图分类号
X [环境科学、安全科学];
学科分类号
08 ; 0830 ;
摘要
Fjords have been recently recognized as hot spots of organic carbon (C-org) sequestration in marine sediments. This study aims to identify regional and local drivers of variability of C-org burial in north Atlantic and Arctic fjords. We provide a comparative quantification of C-org, delta C-13, photosynthetic pigments content, benthic biomass, consumption, C-org accumulation, and burial rates in sediments in six fjords (60-81 degrees N). Higher sediment C-org content in southern Norway reflected longer phytoplankton growth season and higher productivity. Higher contributions of terrestrial C-org were noted in temperate/southern Norway (dense land vegetation and high precipitation) and Arctic/Svalbard (glacial erosion) than in subarctic/northern Norway locations. Benthic biomass and carbon consumption were best correlated to delta C-13 and photosynthetic pigments content indicating control by quality rather than quantity of available food. Benthic faunal consumption did not seem to affect the variability in C-org burial. Regional environmental factors (water temperature and latitude) combined with local factors (C-org, grain size, and pigment concentration) explained 94% of C-org burial variability. Based on the present study and literature data on C-org content, origin, and burial rates, the fjords were classified into four categories: temperate, subarctic, Arctic with glaciers, and Arctic without glaciers. The variability in marine productivity, terrestrial inflows, and carbon sequestration in fjords must be considered for global estimates of their role in blue carbon storage and for building scenarios of future changes in the course of climate warming.
引用
收藏
页码:3737 / 3751
页数:15
相关论文
共 93 条
[71]  
Smith L. M., 2002, ARCTIC, V109-122
[72]   High rates of organic carbon burial in fjord sediments globally [J].
Smith, Richard W. ;
Bianchi, Thomas S. ;
Allison, Mead ;
Savage, Candida ;
Galy, Valier .
NATURE GEOSCIENCE, 2015, 8 (06) :450-U46
[73]   Pre- and post-industrial environmental changes as revealed by the biogeochemical sedimentary record of Drammensfjord, Norway [J].
Smittenberg, RH ;
Baas, M ;
Green, MJ ;
Hopmans, EC ;
Schouten, S ;
Damsté, JSS .
MARINE GEOLOGY, 2005, 214 (1-3) :177-200
[74]   A 400-year record of environmental change in an euxinic fjord as revealed by the sedimentary biomarker record [J].
Smittenberg, RH ;
Pancost, RD ;
Hopmans, EC ;
Paetzel, M ;
Damsté, JSS .
PALAEOGEOGRAPHY PALAEOCLIMATOLOGY PALAEOECOLOGY, 2004, 202 (3-4) :331-351
[75]   Isotopic constraints of sedimentary inputs and organic carbon burial rates in the Saguenay Fjord, Quebec [J].
St-Onge, G ;
Hillaire-Marcel, C .
MARINE GEOLOGY, 2001, 176 (1-4) :1-22
[76]   Factors influencing organic carbon recycling and burial in Skagerrak sediments [J].
Ståhl, H ;
Tengberg, A ;
Brunnegård, J ;
Bjornbom, E ;
Forbes, TL ;
Josefson, AB ;
Kaberi, HG ;
Hassellöv, IMK ;
Olsgard, F ;
Roos, P ;
Hall, POJ .
JOURNAL OF MARINE RESEARCH, 2004, 62 (06) :867-907
[77]   Respiration and sequestering of organic carbon in shelf sediments of the oligotrophic northern Aegean Sea [J].
Ståhl, H ;
Hall, POJ ;
Tengberg, A ;
Josefson, AB ;
Streftaris, N ;
Zenetos, A ;
Karageorgis, AP .
MARINE ECOLOGY PROGRESS SERIES, 2004, 269 :33-48
[78]  
Stein R, 2004, ORGANIC CARBON CYCLE IN THE ARCTIC OCEAN, P169
[79]   First assessment of flux rates of jellyfish carcasses (jelly-falls) to the benthos reveals the importance of gelatinous material for biological C-cycling in jellyfish-dominated ecosystems [J].
Sweetman, Andrew K. ;
Chapman, Annelise .
FRONTIERS IN MARINE SCIENCE, 2015, 2
[80]  
Tahey T., 1994, MARINE ECOLOGY PROGR, V119-130