Discerning the roles of ocean acidification, eutrophication, and river alkalization in driving long-term pH trends in the Chesapeake Bay

Rising anthropogenic CO2 in the atmosphere and oceanic uptake of CO2 have led to a gradual decrease in seawater pH and ocean acidification, but pH changes in estuaries and coastal systems are more complicated due to a multitude of global and regional environmental drivers. Increasing global fertiliz...

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Main Author: Guo, Yijun
Other Authors: Li, Ming, Digital Repository at the University of Maryland, University of Maryland (College Park, Md.), Marine-Estuarine-Environmental Sciences
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2022
Subjects:
Gam
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1903/28812
https://doi.org/10.13016/mavd-f8in
id ftunivmaryland:oai:drum.lib.umd.edu:1903/28812
record_format openpolar
spelling ftunivmaryland:oai:drum.lib.umd.edu:1903/28812 2023-05-15T17:49:43+02:00 Discerning the roles of ocean acidification, eutrophication, and river alkalization in driving long-term pH trends in the Chesapeake Bay Guo, Yijun Li, Ming Digital Repository at the University of Maryland University of Maryland (College Park, Md.) Marine-Estuarine-Environmental Sciences 2022 application/pdf http://hdl.handle.net/1903/28812 https://doi.org/10.13016/mavd-f8in en eng https://doi.org/10.13016/mavd-f8in http://hdl.handle.net/1903/28812 Environmental science Chesapeake Bay Climate Change Eutrophication Modeling Ocean acidification River alkalinization Thesis 2022 ftunivmaryland https://doi.org/10.13016/mavd-f8in 2022-11-20T17:47:22Z Rising anthropogenic CO2 in the atmosphere and oceanic uptake of CO2 have led to a gradual decrease in seawater pH and ocean acidification, but pH changes in estuaries and coastal systems are more complicated due to a multitude of global and regional environmental drivers. Increasing global fertilizer use due to agricultural production has led to a doubling of riverine nutrient loading since the 1950s, leading to widespread eutrophication in estuarine and coastal waters. Excessive nutrient loading stimulates primary production in the surface euphotic layer, which consumes CO2 and elevates pH, but unassimilated organic matter sinks and decomposes in bottom waters, producing CO2 and reducing pH. In the meantime, human-accelerated chemical weathering, such as acid rain and mining, has resulted in rising alkalinity in many rivers and basification in estuarine and coastal waters. To discern how these environmental drivers influence long-term pH trends in coastal waters, a coupled hydrodynamic-biogeochemical-carbonate chemistry model was used to conduct hindcast simulations of the Chesapeake Bay between 1951 and 2010. The model reproduced the observed chlorophyll increase and hypoxia expansion due to the increased nutrient loading. In contrast, low-pH bottom waters and acidic volume shrank from 1950 to 1980. GAM analysis of long-term pH trends in different regions of Chesapeake Bay revealed increasing pH in the upper Bay driven by the river alkalinization, a peak pH in the mid-Bay in the 1980s coincident with the peak nutrient loading and decreasing pH in the lower Bay driven by ocean acidification. Four scenario runs were performed to assess the individual effects of rising pCO2, river alkalinization, riverine nutrient loading, and climate change (warming and sea-level rise) on long-term pH changes in the Chesapeake Bay. The model results suggested that river alkalinization was more important than ocean acidification in driving the long-term pH changes in the estuary. Thesis Ocean acidification University of Maryland: Digital Repository (DRUM) Gam ENVELOPE(-57.955,-57.955,-61.923,-61.923) Lower Bay ENVELOPE(-97.817,-97.817,58.821,58.821)
institution Open Polar
collection University of Maryland: Digital Repository (DRUM)
op_collection_id ftunivmaryland
language English
topic Environmental science
Chesapeake Bay
Climate Change
Eutrophication
Modeling
Ocean acidification
River alkalinization
spellingShingle Environmental science
Chesapeake Bay
Climate Change
Eutrophication
Modeling
Ocean acidification
River alkalinization
Guo, Yijun
Discerning the roles of ocean acidification, eutrophication, and river alkalization in driving long-term pH trends in the Chesapeake Bay
topic_facet Environmental science
Chesapeake Bay
Climate Change
Eutrophication
Modeling
Ocean acidification
River alkalinization
description Rising anthropogenic CO2 in the atmosphere and oceanic uptake of CO2 have led to a gradual decrease in seawater pH and ocean acidification, but pH changes in estuaries and coastal systems are more complicated due to a multitude of global and regional environmental drivers. Increasing global fertilizer use due to agricultural production has led to a doubling of riverine nutrient loading since the 1950s, leading to widespread eutrophication in estuarine and coastal waters. Excessive nutrient loading stimulates primary production in the surface euphotic layer, which consumes CO2 and elevates pH, but unassimilated organic matter sinks and decomposes in bottom waters, producing CO2 and reducing pH. In the meantime, human-accelerated chemical weathering, such as acid rain and mining, has resulted in rising alkalinity in many rivers and basification in estuarine and coastal waters. To discern how these environmental drivers influence long-term pH trends in coastal waters, a coupled hydrodynamic-biogeochemical-carbonate chemistry model was used to conduct hindcast simulations of the Chesapeake Bay between 1951 and 2010. The model reproduced the observed chlorophyll increase and hypoxia expansion due to the increased nutrient loading. In contrast, low-pH bottom waters and acidic volume shrank from 1950 to 1980. GAM analysis of long-term pH trends in different regions of Chesapeake Bay revealed increasing pH in the upper Bay driven by the river alkalinization, a peak pH in the mid-Bay in the 1980s coincident with the peak nutrient loading and decreasing pH in the lower Bay driven by ocean acidification. Four scenario runs were performed to assess the individual effects of rising pCO2, river alkalinization, riverine nutrient loading, and climate change (warming and sea-level rise) on long-term pH changes in the Chesapeake Bay. The model results suggested that river alkalinization was more important than ocean acidification in driving the long-term pH changes in the estuary.
author2 Li, Ming
Digital Repository at the University of Maryland
University of Maryland (College Park, Md.)
Marine-Estuarine-Environmental Sciences
format Thesis
author Guo, Yijun
author_facet Guo, Yijun
author_sort Guo, Yijun
title Discerning the roles of ocean acidification, eutrophication, and river alkalization in driving long-term pH trends in the Chesapeake Bay
title_short Discerning the roles of ocean acidification, eutrophication, and river alkalization in driving long-term pH trends in the Chesapeake Bay
title_full Discerning the roles of ocean acidification, eutrophication, and river alkalization in driving long-term pH trends in the Chesapeake Bay
title_fullStr Discerning the roles of ocean acidification, eutrophication, and river alkalization in driving long-term pH trends in the Chesapeake Bay
title_full_unstemmed Discerning the roles of ocean acidification, eutrophication, and river alkalization in driving long-term pH trends in the Chesapeake Bay
title_sort discerning the roles of ocean acidification, eutrophication, and river alkalization in driving long-term ph trends in the chesapeake bay
publishDate 2022
url http://hdl.handle.net/1903/28812
https://doi.org/10.13016/mavd-f8in
long_lat ENVELOPE(-57.955,-57.955,-61.923,-61.923)
ENVELOPE(-97.817,-97.817,58.821,58.821)
geographic Gam
Lower Bay
geographic_facet Gam
Lower Bay
genre Ocean acidification
genre_facet Ocean acidification
op_relation https://doi.org/10.13016/mavd-f8in
http://hdl.handle.net/1903/28812
op_doi https://doi.org/10.13016/mavd-f8in
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