Cross-shelf biogeochemical characteristics of sediments in the central Benguela and their relationship to overlying water column hypoxia

Data from two cross-shelf sediment sampling cruises were used to explain reasons for the sediment biogeochemical variability in respect of carbon, nitrogen and sulphur, and how the cycling of these elements governs the biogeochemistry of the overlying water through their control of the redox conditions. The spatial extent of this benthic–pelagic flux link is limited to the innershelf mud belt system on the Namibian shelf. The inshore mud belt is the primary deposition area of the carbon and nitrogen new production export flux. The offshore organic-rich zones are thought to be relict particulate organic matter originating from the inshore mud belt rather than from an overlying pelagic source. These data were used to set up a multi-layer sediment model that was used through sensitivity analyses to elucidate the input characteristics that result in the most significant feedbacks on hypoxia in the overlying water. The analyses showed that, although the new production flux is a requirement to drive an oxygen demand in the sediments, the onset and persistence of anoxia may depend critically on a low-oxygen boundary condition threshold. This is thought to be a key differentiating factor between systems that, despite comparable carbon export fluxes, are characterised by a persistent hypoxia/anoxia signal and those that are characterised by episodic hypoxia events. It was concluded that sediment oxygen demand and methane and ‘sulphide’ emissions from the central Benguela sediments are responses to external hypoxia boundary conditions rather than the local drivers of oxygen variability.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Monteiro, P.M.S., Van Der Plas, Anja, Pascall, A.
Format: Journal Contribution biblioteca
Language:English
Published: Nisc 2007
Subjects:Carbon, Anoxia, Hypoxia, Modelling, Sediments,
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1834/2129
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spelling dig-aquadocs-1834-21292021-05-19T06:18:11Z Cross-shelf biogeochemical characteristics of sediments in the central Benguela and their relationship to overlying water column hypoxia Monteiro, P.M.S. Van Der Plas, Anja Pascall, A. Carbon Anoxia Hypoxia Anoxia Carbon Hypoxia Modelling Sediments Data from two cross-shelf sediment sampling cruises were used to explain reasons for the sediment biogeochemical variability in respect of carbon, nitrogen and sulphur, and how the cycling of these elements governs the biogeochemistry of the overlying water through their control of the redox conditions. The spatial extent of this benthic–pelagic flux link is limited to the innershelf mud belt system on the Namibian shelf. The inshore mud belt is the primary deposition area of the carbon and nitrogen new production export flux. The offshore organic-rich zones are thought to be relict particulate organic matter originating from the inshore mud belt rather than from an overlying pelagic source. These data were used to set up a multi-layer sediment model that was used through sensitivity analyses to elucidate the input characteristics that result in the most significant feedbacks on hypoxia in the overlying water. The analyses showed that, although the new production flux is a requirement to drive an oxygen demand in the sediments, the onset and persistence of anoxia may depend critically on a low-oxygen boundary condition threshold. This is thought to be a key differentiating factor between systems that, despite comparable carbon export fluxes, are characterised by a persistent hypoxia/anoxia signal and those that are characterised by episodic hypoxia events. It was concluded that sediment oxygen demand and methane and ‘sulphide’ emissions from the central Benguela sediments are responses to external hypoxia boundary conditions rather than the local drivers of oxygen variability. Department for Environmental Affairs and Tourism Published Namibia 2008-02-20T12:34:17Z 2008-02-20T12:34:17Z 2007 Journal Contribution Non-Refereed Article South African journal of marine science, 29(1). p. 37-47 1814-2338 http://hdl.handle.net/1834/2129 en Namibia Nisc
institution UNESCO
collection DSpace
country Francia
countrycode FR
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-aquadocs
tag biblioteca
region Europa del Oeste
libraryname Repositorio AQUADOCS
language English
topic Carbon
Anoxia
Hypoxia
Anoxia
Carbon
Hypoxia
Modelling
Sediments
Carbon
Anoxia
Hypoxia
Anoxia
Carbon
Hypoxia
Modelling
Sediments
spellingShingle Carbon
Anoxia
Hypoxia
Anoxia
Carbon
Hypoxia
Modelling
Sediments
Carbon
Anoxia
Hypoxia
Anoxia
Carbon
Hypoxia
Modelling
Sediments
Monteiro, P.M.S.
Van Der Plas, Anja
Pascall, A.
Cross-shelf biogeochemical characteristics of sediments in the central Benguela and their relationship to overlying water column hypoxia
description Data from two cross-shelf sediment sampling cruises were used to explain reasons for the sediment biogeochemical variability in respect of carbon, nitrogen and sulphur, and how the cycling of these elements governs the biogeochemistry of the overlying water through their control of the redox conditions. The spatial extent of this benthic–pelagic flux link is limited to the innershelf mud belt system on the Namibian shelf. The inshore mud belt is the primary deposition area of the carbon and nitrogen new production export flux. The offshore organic-rich zones are thought to be relict particulate organic matter originating from the inshore mud belt rather than from an overlying pelagic source. These data were used to set up a multi-layer sediment model that was used through sensitivity analyses to elucidate the input characteristics that result in the most significant feedbacks on hypoxia in the overlying water. The analyses showed that, although the new production flux is a requirement to drive an oxygen demand in the sediments, the onset and persistence of anoxia may depend critically on a low-oxygen boundary condition threshold. This is thought to be a key differentiating factor between systems that, despite comparable carbon export fluxes, are characterised by a persistent hypoxia/anoxia signal and those that are characterised by episodic hypoxia events. It was concluded that sediment oxygen demand and methane and ‘sulphide’ emissions from the central Benguela sediments are responses to external hypoxia boundary conditions rather than the local drivers of oxygen variability.
format Journal Contribution
topic_facet Carbon
Anoxia
Hypoxia
Anoxia
Carbon
Hypoxia
Modelling
Sediments
author Monteiro, P.M.S.
Van Der Plas, Anja
Pascall, A.
author_facet Monteiro, P.M.S.
Van Der Plas, Anja
Pascall, A.
author_sort Monteiro, P.M.S.
title Cross-shelf biogeochemical characteristics of sediments in the central Benguela and their relationship to overlying water column hypoxia
title_short Cross-shelf biogeochemical characteristics of sediments in the central Benguela and their relationship to overlying water column hypoxia
title_full Cross-shelf biogeochemical characteristics of sediments in the central Benguela and their relationship to overlying water column hypoxia
title_fullStr Cross-shelf biogeochemical characteristics of sediments in the central Benguela and their relationship to overlying water column hypoxia
title_full_unstemmed Cross-shelf biogeochemical characteristics of sediments in the central Benguela and their relationship to overlying water column hypoxia
title_sort cross-shelf biogeochemical characteristics of sediments in the central benguela and their relationship to overlying water column hypoxia
publisher Nisc
publishDate 2007
url http://hdl.handle.net/1834/2129
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AT vanderplasanja crossshelfbiogeochemicalcharacteristicsofsedimentsinthecentralbenguelaandtheirrelationshiptooverlyingwatercolumnhypoxia
AT pascalla crossshelfbiogeochemicalcharacteristicsofsedimentsinthecentralbenguelaandtheirrelationshiptooverlyingwatercolumnhypoxia
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