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Benthic fluxes in San Francisco Bay

Authors :
Christopher C. Fuller
Douglas E. Hammond
Michael Korosec
Laurence G. Miller
Dana D. Harmon
Rebecca Rea
William M. Berelson
Stephen W. Hager
Steven Warren
Blayne Hartman
Source :
Hydrobiologia. 129:69-90
Publication Year :
1985
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 1985.

Abstract

Measurements of benthic fluxes have been made on four occasions between February 1980 and February 1981 at a channel station and a shoal station in South San Francisco Bay, using in situ flux chambers. On each occasion replicate measurements of easily measured substances such as radon, oxygen, ammonia, and silica showed a variability (±1σ) of 30% or more over distances of a few meters to tens of meters, presumably due to spatial heterogeneity in the benthic community. Fluxes of radon were greater at the shoal station than at the channel station because of greater macrofaunal irrigation at the former, but showed little seasonal variability at either station. At both stations fluxes of oxygen, carbon dioxide, ammonia, and silica were largest following the spring bloom. Fluxes measured during different seasons ranged over factors of 2–3, 3, 4–5, and 3–10 (respectively), due to variations in phytoplankton productivity and temperature. Fluxes of oxygen and carbon dioxide were greater at the shoal station than at the channel station because the net phytoplankton productivity is greater there and the organic matter produced must be rapidly incorporated in the sediment column. Fluxes of silica were greater at the shoal station, probably because of the greater irrigation rates there. N + N (nitrate + nitrite) fluxes were variable in magnitude and in sign. Phosphate fluxes were too small to measure accurately. Alkalinity fluxes were similar at the two stations and are attributed primarily to carbonate dissolution at the shoal station and to sulfate reduction at the channel station. The estimated average fluxes into South Bay, based on results from these two stations over the course of a year, are (in mmol m−2d−1):O2= −27 ± 6; TCO2= 23 ± 6; Alkalinity = 9 ± 2; N + N = −0.3 ± 0.5; NH3 = 1.4 ± 0.2; PO4 = 0.1 ± 0.4; Si = 5.6 ± 1.1. These fluxes are comparable in magnitude to those in other temperate estuaries with similar productivity, although the seasonal variability is smaller, probably because the annual temperature range in San Francisco Bay is smaller.

Details

ISSN :
15735117 and 00188158
Volume :
129
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Hydrobiologia
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........2dec0694f5155d8a3dfbdd92a5dd6eca