Svinoy transect oxygen and dissolved inorganic carbon
We report on a pilot study using a CO2 optode deployed on a Seaglider in the Norwegian Sea for 8 months (March to October 2014). The optode measurements required drift- and lag-correction, and in situ calibration using discrete water samples collected in the vicinity. We found the optode signal corr...
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Format: | Dataset |
Language: | unknown |
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University of Bergen
2020
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Online Access: | https://dx.doi.org/10.21335/nmdc-1654657723 http://metadata.nmdc.no/metadata-api/landingpage/cee3e811e0369a90fd709de3824a8708 |
Summary: | We report on a pilot study using a CO2 optode deployed on a Seaglider in the Norwegian Sea for 8 months (March to October 2014). The optode measurements required drift- and lag-correction, and in situ calibration using discrete water samples collected in the vicinity. We found the optode signal correlated better with the concentration of CO2, c(CO2), than with its partial pressure, p(CO2). Using the calibrated c(CO2) and a regional parameterisation of total alkalinity (AT) as a function of temperature and salinity, we calculated total dissolved inorganic carbon concentrations, CT, which had a standard deviation of 10 µmol kg-1 compared with direct CT measurements. The glider was also equipped with an oxygen (O2) optode. The O2 optode was drift-corrected and calibrated using a c(O2) climatology for deep samples (R2 = 0.89; RMSE = 0.009 µmol kg-1). The survey area was a source of O2 and a sink of CO2 for most of the summer. The deployment captured two different surface waters: the Norwegian Atlantic Current (NwAC) and the Norwegian Coastal Current (NCC). The NCC was characterised by lower c(O2) and CT than the NwAC, as well as lower N(O2), N(CT) and craw(Chl a). Our results show the potential of glider data to simultaneously capture time and depth-resolved variability in CT and O2. |
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