Large-scale hypoxia regularly develops during the summer on the Louisiana continental shelf. Traditionally, hypoxia has been linked to the vast winter and spring nutrient inputs from the Mississippi River and its distributary, the Atchafalaya River. However, recent studies indicate that much of the shelf ecosystem is heterotrophic. We used data from five late July shelfwide cruises from 2006 to 2010 to examine carbon and oxygen production and identify net autotrophic areas of phytoplankton growth on the Louisiana shelf. During these summer times of moderate river flows, shelfwide pH and particulate organic carbon (POC) consistently showed strong signals for net autotrophy in low salinity (<25) waters near the river mouths. There was substantial POC removal via grazing and sedimentation in near-river regions, with 66-85 % of POC lost from surface waters in the low and mid-salinity ranges without producing strong respiration signals in surface waters. This POC removal in nearshore environments indicates highly efficient algal retention by the shelf ecosystem. Updated carbon export calculations for local estuaries and a preliminary shelfwide carbon budget agree with older concepts that offshore hypoxia is linked strongly to nutrient loading from the Mississippi River, but a new emphasis on cross-shelf dynamics emerged in this research. Cross-shelf transects indicated that river-influenced nearshore waters <15 m deep are strong sources of net carbon production, with currents and wave-induced resuspension likely transporting this POC offshore to fuel hypoxia in adjacent mid-shelf bottom waters.
Abstract. Shallow coastal waters in many regions are subject to nutrient enrichment.
Microphytobenthos (MPB) can account for much of the carbon (C) fixation in
these environments, depending on the depth of the water column, but the
effect of enhanced nutrient availability on the processing and fate of
MPB-derived C (MPB-C) is relatively unknown. In this study, MPB was labeled
(stable isotope enrichment) in situ using 13C-sodium bicarbonate. The
processing and fate of the newly fixed MPB-C was then traced using ex situ
incubations over 3.5 days under different concentrations of nutrients
(NH4+ and PO43-: ambient, 2× ambient, 5×
ambient, and 10× ambient). After 3.5 days, sediments incubated with
increased nutrient concentrations (amended treatments) had increased loss of
13C from sediment organic matter (OM) as a
portion of initial uptake (95 % remaining in ambient vs. 79–93 % for
amended treatments) and less 13C in MPB (52 % ambient, 26–49 %
amended), most likely reflecting increased turnover of MPB-derived C
supporting increased production of extracellular enzymes and storage
products. Loss of MPB-derived C to the water column via dissolved organic C
(DOC) was minimal regardless of treatment (0.4–0.6 %). Loss due to
respiration was more substantial, with effluxes of dissolved inorganic C
(DIC) increasing with additional nutrient availability (4 % ambient,
6.6–19.8 % amended). These shifts resulted in a decreased turnover time
for algal C (419 days ambient, 134–199 days amended). This suggests that
nutrient enrichment of estuaries may ultimately lead to decreased retention
of carbon within MPB-dominated sediments.
Particle ingestion and assimilation have also been suggested as a source of nutrition based on dissections, variable stable isotope values and aquarium studies (Le Pennec &
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