4.5 Article

Phosphorus Cycling and Burial in Sediments of a Seasonally Hypoxic Marine Basin

Journal

ESTUARIES AND COASTS
Volume 41, Issue 4, Pages 921-939

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s12237-017-0324-0

Keywords

Phosphorus; Recycling; Burial efficiency; Benthic flux; Cable bacteria

Funding

  1. Diamond Light Source
  2. Darwin Centre for Biogeosciences
  3. European Research Council, under the European Community's Seventh Framework Programme (ERC Starting Grants) [278364, 306933]
  4. Netherlands Organisation for Scientific Research [NWO Vici 865.13.005]
  5. National Ocean and Coastal Research Programme [83910502]
  6. Netherlands Earth System Science Center (NESSC)

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Recycling of phosphorus (P) from sediments contributes to the development of bottom-water hypoxia in many coastal systems. Here, we present results of a year-long assessment of P dynamics in sediments of a seasonally hypoxic coastal marine basin (Lake Grevelingen, the Netherlands) in 2012. Sequential phosphorus extractions (SEDEX) and X-ray absorption spectroscopy (XAS) indicate that P was adsorbed to Fe-(III)-(oxyhydr) oxides when cable bacteria were active in the surface sediments in spring. With the onset of summer hypo x i a, sulphide-induced dissolution of the Fe-(III)-(oxyhydr) oxides led to P release to the pore water and overlying water. The similarity in authigenic Ca-P concentrations in the sediment and suspended matter suggest that Ca-P is not formed in situ. The P burial efficiency was <= 32%. Hypoxia-driven sedimentary P recycling had a major impact on the water-column chemistry in the basin in 2012. Water-column monitoring data indicate up to ninefold higher surface water concentrations of phosphate in the basin in the late 1970s and a stronger hypoxia-driven seasonal P release from the sediment. The amplified release of P from the sediment in the past is attributed to the presence of a larger pool of Fe-bound P in the basin prior to the first onset of hypoxia. Given that P is not limiting, primary production in the basin has not been affected by the decadal changes in P availability and recycling over the past 40 years. The changes in P dynamics on decadal time scales were not recorded in sediment profiles of total P or organic C/total P.

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