Effect of Theora lubrica on the Response of Coastal Soft Sediment Nitrogen Cycling to Ocean Acidification

Ocean acidification could influence nitrogen cycling in coastal soft sediments, which are moderated by bioturbating macrofauna. The functioning of coastal ecosystems has a strong connection with nitrogen fluxes that occur at the sediment–seawater interface; the disturbance of the sediment matrix via...

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Main Author: Wakefield, Samuel Peter
Other Authors: Vopel, Kay, Laverock, Bonnie
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Auckland University of Technology 2019
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10292/12837
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spelling ftautuniv:oai:openrepository.aut.ac.nz:10292/12837 2023-10-01T03:58:33+02:00 Effect of Theora lubrica on the Response of Coastal Soft Sediment Nitrogen Cycling to Ocean Acidification Wakefield, Samuel Peter Vopel, Kay Laverock, Bonnie 2019 application/pdf https://hdl.handle.net/10292/12837 en eng Auckland University of Technology https://hdl.handle.net/10292/12837 OpenAccess Marine sediments Sediment biogeochemistry Ocean acidification Bioturbation Coastal nutrient cycling Nitrogen cycling Thesis 2019 ftautuniv 2023-09-06T14:02:21Z Ocean acidification could influence nitrogen cycling in coastal soft sediments, which are moderated by bioturbating macrofauna. The functioning of coastal ecosystems has a strong connection with nitrogen fluxes that occur at the sediment–seawater interface; the disturbance of the sediment matrix via bioturbation can significantly alter these fluxes. To investigate how decreasing seawater pH affects the fluxes of 02, NH4+, NO2– and NO3–, I incubated sediment core samples of intact coastal subtidal silt in four seawater recirculating systems and injected CO2 to adjust their pH to 8.0, 7.8, 7.6 and 7.4. I also incorporated bioturbation via a Bivalve treatment by adding 10 Theora lubrica (introduced infaunal bivalve) to a sediment core. Furthermore, the experiment was done in full darkness to eliminate photosynthesis, and salinity and temperature were controlled variables. Initial measurements at in situ pCO2 indicated, that the Bivalve treatment significantly increased NH4+ and NO3– effluxes, and O2 influxes, but had no effect on NO2- fluxes. After a 20-day incubation, the final measurements revealed, that seawater acidification significantly increased NH4+ and NO2– effluxes, but had no effect on the fluxes of NO3- and O2. Furthermore, I detected no significant effects on nitrogen fluxes by the interaction between the pH and Bivalve treatments; however, the interaction significantly decreased O2 influxes. I hypothesise that the addition of T. lubrica stimulated ammonification and nitrification at in situ pCO2 during the initial measurements. I also suspect that seawater acidification decreased coupled nitrification-denitrification during the final measurements. Furthermore, I suggest that T. lubrica caused both direct and indirect effects on the sediment matrix, leading to the significant decrease in O2 influxes during lower seawater pH within the Bivalve treatment cores. Overall, my study was conclusive because I was able to prove that T. lubrica had no influence on coastal soft sediment nitrogen cycling during ... Thesis Ocean acidification Auckland University of Technology: Tuwhera Open Research
institution Open Polar
collection Auckland University of Technology: Tuwhera Open Research
op_collection_id ftautuniv
language English
topic Marine sediments
Sediment biogeochemistry
Ocean acidification
Bioturbation
Coastal nutrient cycling
Nitrogen cycling
spellingShingle Marine sediments
Sediment biogeochemistry
Ocean acidification
Bioturbation
Coastal nutrient cycling
Nitrogen cycling
Wakefield, Samuel Peter
Effect of Theora lubrica on the Response of Coastal Soft Sediment Nitrogen Cycling to Ocean Acidification
topic_facet Marine sediments
Sediment biogeochemistry
Ocean acidification
Bioturbation
Coastal nutrient cycling
Nitrogen cycling
description Ocean acidification could influence nitrogen cycling in coastal soft sediments, which are moderated by bioturbating macrofauna. The functioning of coastal ecosystems has a strong connection with nitrogen fluxes that occur at the sediment–seawater interface; the disturbance of the sediment matrix via bioturbation can significantly alter these fluxes. To investigate how decreasing seawater pH affects the fluxes of 02, NH4+, NO2– and NO3–, I incubated sediment core samples of intact coastal subtidal silt in four seawater recirculating systems and injected CO2 to adjust their pH to 8.0, 7.8, 7.6 and 7.4. I also incorporated bioturbation via a Bivalve treatment by adding 10 Theora lubrica (introduced infaunal bivalve) to a sediment core. Furthermore, the experiment was done in full darkness to eliminate photosynthesis, and salinity and temperature were controlled variables. Initial measurements at in situ pCO2 indicated, that the Bivalve treatment significantly increased NH4+ and NO3– effluxes, and O2 influxes, but had no effect on NO2- fluxes. After a 20-day incubation, the final measurements revealed, that seawater acidification significantly increased NH4+ and NO2– effluxes, but had no effect on the fluxes of NO3- and O2. Furthermore, I detected no significant effects on nitrogen fluxes by the interaction between the pH and Bivalve treatments; however, the interaction significantly decreased O2 influxes. I hypothesise that the addition of T. lubrica stimulated ammonification and nitrification at in situ pCO2 during the initial measurements. I also suspect that seawater acidification decreased coupled nitrification-denitrification during the final measurements. Furthermore, I suggest that T. lubrica caused both direct and indirect effects on the sediment matrix, leading to the significant decrease in O2 influxes during lower seawater pH within the Bivalve treatment cores. Overall, my study was conclusive because I was able to prove that T. lubrica had no influence on coastal soft sediment nitrogen cycling during ...
author2 Vopel, Kay
Laverock, Bonnie
format Thesis
author Wakefield, Samuel Peter
author_facet Wakefield, Samuel Peter
author_sort Wakefield, Samuel Peter
title Effect of Theora lubrica on the Response of Coastal Soft Sediment Nitrogen Cycling to Ocean Acidification
title_short Effect of Theora lubrica on the Response of Coastal Soft Sediment Nitrogen Cycling to Ocean Acidification
title_full Effect of Theora lubrica on the Response of Coastal Soft Sediment Nitrogen Cycling to Ocean Acidification
title_fullStr Effect of Theora lubrica on the Response of Coastal Soft Sediment Nitrogen Cycling to Ocean Acidification
title_full_unstemmed Effect of Theora lubrica on the Response of Coastal Soft Sediment Nitrogen Cycling to Ocean Acidification
title_sort effect of theora lubrica on the response of coastal soft sediment nitrogen cycling to ocean acidification
publisher Auckland University of Technology
publishDate 2019
url https://hdl.handle.net/10292/12837
genre Ocean acidification
genre_facet Ocean acidification
op_relation https://hdl.handle.net/10292/12837
op_rights OpenAccess
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