Components and Mechanisms of Total Alkalinity Variability in an Intertidal Salt Marsh

Under increased ocean acidification, assessing natural diurnal variation in coastal ocean acidity requires renewed evaluation of carbonate system measurements. A more detailed understanding of these measurements will be useful when considering the growth and settlement of calcifying organisms, and w...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Anderson, Lloyd B
Format: Text
Language:unknown
Published: Bowdoin Digital Commons 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:https://digitalcommons.bowdoin.edu/honorsprojects/47
https://digitalcommons.bowdoin.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1055&context=honorsprojects
id ftbowdoincollege:oai:digitalcommons.bowdoin.edu:honorsprojects-1055
record_format openpolar
spelling ftbowdoincollege:oai:digitalcommons.bowdoin.edu:honorsprojects-1055 2023-05-15T17:51:56+02:00 Components and Mechanisms of Total Alkalinity Variability in an Intertidal Salt Marsh Anderson, Lloyd B 2016-05-01T07:00:00Z application/pdf https://digitalcommons.bowdoin.edu/honorsprojects/47 https://digitalcommons.bowdoin.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1055&context=honorsprojects unknown Bowdoin Digital Commons https://digitalcommons.bowdoin.edu/honorsprojects/47 https://digitalcommons.bowdoin.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1055&context=honorsprojects Honors Projects alkalinity salt marsh acidification anaerobic respiration isotope mixing model dissolved inorganic carbon Biogeochemistry Oceanography text 2016 ftbowdoincollege 2023-02-24T06:37:58Z Under increased ocean acidification, assessing natural diurnal variation in coastal ocean acidity requires renewed evaluation of carbonate system measurements. A more detailed understanding of these measurements will be useful when considering the growth and settlement of calcifying organisms, and will help assess future effects of acidification on natural variability in coastal acidity. This study used an original CO2-free titration system based on an existing method (Cai et al., 1998) to assess components of total alkalinity (TA) variability within the Sage Lot Pond intertidal salt marsh on Cape Cod, MA in July and October of 2015. Additionally, the isotopic signature of the dissolved inorganic carbon (DIC) pool was fit into an isotope mixing model to further explore variability in TA. In the marsh, non-carbonate alkalinity (NCA) contributed a measurable amount of alkalinity to TA, with the majority of NCA constituted by “organic/undefined” alkalinity. Average TA in the marsh varied between 1812-2097 µmol L-1 and average NCA varied between 85-149 µmol L-1. Throughout the days studied, NCA made up 4-8 % of TA and thus was considered a “baseline” of alkalinity contributing to TA. The consistent occurrence of “organic/undefined” alkalinity within the marsh has implications for calculations within the carbonate system that involve TA measurement, where the use of TA rather than carbonate alkalinity (CA) results in a 20-30 µatm overestimation of pCO2 and a 0.05-0.3 overestimation of ΩA. Variations in carbonate alkalinity (CA) were determined to result in the measured TA variability. Most clearly during the July sampling days, TA variability was reflected by changes in the porewater-derived DIC produced from respiration within the marsh sediments, which may indicate processes responsible for net alkalinity generation such as iron and sulfate reduction (paired with organic carbon oxidation) or inorganic CaCO3 dissolution. This porewater-derived DIC component (DICPW) made up between 0.1-7.5% of the DIC pool on the ... Text Ocean acidification Bowdoin College: Bowdoin Digital Commons
institution Open Polar
collection Bowdoin College: Bowdoin Digital Commons
op_collection_id ftbowdoincollege
language unknown
topic alkalinity
salt marsh
acidification
anaerobic respiration
isotope mixing model
dissolved inorganic carbon
Biogeochemistry
Oceanography
spellingShingle alkalinity
salt marsh
acidification
anaerobic respiration
isotope mixing model
dissolved inorganic carbon
Biogeochemistry
Oceanography
Anderson, Lloyd B
Components and Mechanisms of Total Alkalinity Variability in an Intertidal Salt Marsh
topic_facet alkalinity
salt marsh
acidification
anaerobic respiration
isotope mixing model
dissolved inorganic carbon
Biogeochemistry
Oceanography
description Under increased ocean acidification, assessing natural diurnal variation in coastal ocean acidity requires renewed evaluation of carbonate system measurements. A more detailed understanding of these measurements will be useful when considering the growth and settlement of calcifying organisms, and will help assess future effects of acidification on natural variability in coastal acidity. This study used an original CO2-free titration system based on an existing method (Cai et al., 1998) to assess components of total alkalinity (TA) variability within the Sage Lot Pond intertidal salt marsh on Cape Cod, MA in July and October of 2015. Additionally, the isotopic signature of the dissolved inorganic carbon (DIC) pool was fit into an isotope mixing model to further explore variability in TA. In the marsh, non-carbonate alkalinity (NCA) contributed a measurable amount of alkalinity to TA, with the majority of NCA constituted by “organic/undefined” alkalinity. Average TA in the marsh varied between 1812-2097 µmol L-1 and average NCA varied between 85-149 µmol L-1. Throughout the days studied, NCA made up 4-8 % of TA and thus was considered a “baseline” of alkalinity contributing to TA. The consistent occurrence of “organic/undefined” alkalinity within the marsh has implications for calculations within the carbonate system that involve TA measurement, where the use of TA rather than carbonate alkalinity (CA) results in a 20-30 µatm overestimation of pCO2 and a 0.05-0.3 overestimation of ΩA. Variations in carbonate alkalinity (CA) were determined to result in the measured TA variability. Most clearly during the July sampling days, TA variability was reflected by changes in the porewater-derived DIC produced from respiration within the marsh sediments, which may indicate processes responsible for net alkalinity generation such as iron and sulfate reduction (paired with organic carbon oxidation) or inorganic CaCO3 dissolution. This porewater-derived DIC component (DICPW) made up between 0.1-7.5% of the DIC pool on the ...
format Text
author Anderson, Lloyd B
author_facet Anderson, Lloyd B
author_sort Anderson, Lloyd B
title Components and Mechanisms of Total Alkalinity Variability in an Intertidal Salt Marsh
title_short Components and Mechanisms of Total Alkalinity Variability in an Intertidal Salt Marsh
title_full Components and Mechanisms of Total Alkalinity Variability in an Intertidal Salt Marsh
title_fullStr Components and Mechanisms of Total Alkalinity Variability in an Intertidal Salt Marsh
title_full_unstemmed Components and Mechanisms of Total Alkalinity Variability in an Intertidal Salt Marsh
title_sort components and mechanisms of total alkalinity variability in an intertidal salt marsh
publisher Bowdoin Digital Commons
publishDate 2016
url https://digitalcommons.bowdoin.edu/honorsprojects/47
https://digitalcommons.bowdoin.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1055&context=honorsprojects
genre Ocean acidification
genre_facet Ocean acidification
op_source Honors Projects
op_relation https://digitalcommons.bowdoin.edu/honorsprojects/47
https://digitalcommons.bowdoin.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1055&context=honorsprojects
_version_ 1766159239279017984