Publication | Open Access
Seasonal patterns of sedimentary carbon and anaerobic respiration along a simulated eutrophication gradient
46
Citations
25
References
1991
Year
Concentrations of organic carbon and rates of dissin~ilative sulfate reduction in surface sediments of marine mesocosms were examined along an experimental eutrophication gradient. Phytoplankton biomass increased due to addition of inorganic nutrients (N. P, Si). This increase was especially pronounced during the winter-spring diatom blooms, which increased in magnitude and duration along the nutrient gradient. Net system production in winter and spring resulted in carbon deposition and accumulation in surface sediments (maximum net accumulation 17 m01 C m-'). Benthic remineralization of cdrbon exceeded depositional supply during summer and fall. Sediment carbon concentrations approached background levels in December and February, suggesting very little annual accun~ulation of sediment carbon Sediment oxygen consumption and suifate reduction rates both increased as a result of carbon sedimentation. Sulfate reduction rates in organic enriched sedunents were an order of magnitude higher than control and were correlated with temperature and carbon concentrations (r2 = 0.85). Anaerobic respiration rates in unenriched sediments were related only to seasonal patterns of temperature (r2 = 0.70). Anaerobic metabolism was the dominant metabolic pathway in control and treated sediments, with 50 to 7 0 % of annual carbon remineralization due to sulfate reduction.
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