• Media type: E-Article
  • Title: Large-scale nutrient and carbon dynamics along the river-estuary-ocean continuum
  • Contributor: Kamjunke, Norbert [Author]; Brix, Holger [Author]; Flöser, Götz [Author]; Bussmann, Ingeborg [Author]; Schütze, Claudia [Author]; Achterberg, Eric Pieter [Author]; Ködel, Uta [Author]; Fischer, Philipp [Author]; Rewrie, Louise [Author]; Sanders, Tina [Author]; Borchardt, Dietrich [Author]; Weitere, Markus [Author]
  • imprint: Elsevier, 2023-09-30
  • Language: English
  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.scitotenv.2023.164421
  • Origination:
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  • Description: Highlights • Nutrient and carbon fluxes are key processes in land-ocean interactions. • We sampled along the river-estuary-ocean system according to travel time of water. • The river was autotrophic with phytoplankton growth, high pH and oxygen concentration, and CO2 undersaturation. • Phytoplankton died off in the estuary causing low pH and oxygen concentration, CO2 supersaturation, and nutrient release. • The approach is suitable to investigate single events such as hydrological extremes. Nutrient and carbon dynamics within the river-estuary-coastal water systems are key processes in understanding the flux of matter from the terrestrial environment to the ocean. Here, we analysed those dynamics by following a sampling approach based on the travel time of water and an advanced calculation of nutrient fluxes in the tidal part. We started with a nearly Lagrangian sampling of the river (River Elbe, Germany; 580 km within 8 days). After a subsequent investigation of the estuary, we followed the plume of the river by raster sampling the German Bight (North Sea) using three ships simultaneously. In the river, we detected intensive longitudinal growth of phytoplankton connected with high oxygen saturation and pH values and an undersaturation of CO2, whereas concentrations of dissolved nutrients declined. In the estuary, the Elbe shifted from an autotrophic to a heterotrophic system: Phytoplankton died off upstream of the salinity gradient, causing minima in oxygen saturation and pH, supersaturation of CO2, and a release of nutrients. In the shelf region, phytoplankton and nutrient concentrations were low, oxygen was close to saturation, and pH was within a typical marine range. Over all sections, oxygen saturation was positively related to pH and negatively to pCO2. Corresponding to the significant particulated nutrient flux via phytoplankton, flux rates of dissolved nutrients from river into estuary were low and determined by depleted concentrations. In contrast, fluxes from the estuary to the coastal waters were ...
  • Access State: Open Access