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Emission of CO2 and its related carbonate system dynamics in a hotspot area during winter and summer: The Changjiang River estuary.

Authors :
Li, Bing-Han
Zhao, Hai-Long
Gong, Jiang-Chen
Wu, Xi
Liu, Chun-Ying
Hu, Jing-Wen
Yang, Gui-Peng
Source :
Marine Environmental Research. Jun2024, Vol. 198, pN.PAG-N.PAG. 1p.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

The carbonate chemistry in river-dominated marginal seas is highly heterogeneous, and there is ongoing debate regarding the definition of atmospheric CO 2 source or sink. On this basis, we investigated the carbonate chemistry and air-sea CO 2 fluxes in a hotspot estuarine area: the Changjiang Estuary during winter and summer. The spatial characteristics of the carbonate system were influenced by water mixing of three end-members in winter, including the Changjiang freshwater with low total alkalinity (TA) concentration, the less saline Yellow Sea Surface Water with high TA, and the saline East China Sea (ECS) offshore water with moderate TA. While in summer with increased river discharge, the carbonate system was regulated by simplified two end-member mixing between the Changjiang freshwater and the ECS offshore water. By performing the end-member mixing model on DIC variations in the river plume region, significant biological addition of DIC was found in winter with an estimation of −120 ± 113 μmol kg−1 caused by wintertime organic matter remineralization from terrestrial source. While this biological addition of DIC shifted to DIC removal due to biological production in summer supported by the increased nutrient loading from Changjiang River. The p CO 2 dynamics in the river plume and the ECS offshore were both subjected to physical mixing of freshwater and seawater, whether in winter and summer. In the inner estuary without horizontal mixing, the p CO 2 dynamics were mainly influenced by biological uptake in winter and temperature in summer. The inner estuary, the river plume, and the ECS offshore were sources of atmospheric CO 2 , with their contributions varying seasonally. The Changjiang runoff enhanced the inner estuary's role as a CO 2 source in summer, while intensive biological uptake reduced the river plume's contribution. [Display omitted] • Mixing of end-members drove the variation of carbonate system among seasons. • Winter biological DIC addition and summer DIC removal occurred in the rive plume. • The important role of freshwater inputs in CO 2 emissions from the Changjiang estuary. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
01411136
Volume :
198
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Marine Environmental Research
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
177752978
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.marenvres.2024.106496