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In situ Study of Bromide Tracer and Oxygen Flux in Coastal Sediments
Authors:In situ
Affiliation:d Max Planck Institute for Marine Microbiology, Celsiusstrasse 1, D-28359, Bremen, Germany;a Baltic Sea Research Institute, Seestrasse 6, D-18069, Rostock-Warnemuende, Germany;b Marine Biological Laboratory, University of Copenhagen, Strandpromenaden 5, DK-3000, Helsigøor, Denmark;c Institute of Biological Sciences, University of Aarhus, Ny Munkegarde, DK-8000, Aarhus, Denmark
Abstract:Laboratory and in situ experiments were performed to assess the use of bromide as a tracer forin situ studies of benthic solute exchange. Bromide was used in the benthic chamber lander ‘ Elinor ’ for flux measurements in coastal sediments of the German Bight, Kiel Bight and Skagerrak (28–700 m water depth). Tracer and total oxygen uptake were monitored simultaneously in the same chamber incubation. Concurrently, in situ oxygen micro-profiles were recorded at the same locations by the profiling lander ‘ Profilur ’. Deployment in an anoxic silt (Kiel Bight) confirmed that in the absence of bioturbation and advection, tracer transport into the sediment was driven solely by molecular diffusion. This flux could be well described by a simple box model accounting for molecular diffusion only. In oxic sediments (German Bight and Skagerrak) enhanced exchange of bromide tracer due to bioirrigation parallelled enhanced oxygen uptake equivalent to a 4-fold molecular diffusive flux. Our experiments showed that incubations can be short. Depending on irrigation activity of the fauna, however, incubation length should exceed 3 h in order to provide a useful data base for flux calculations. The method demonstrating caveats is discussed and indicate possible improvements. The results show how the bromide tracer addition can be used as a tool for determining solute fluxes exceeding diffusive flux in benthic chamber incubations.
Keywords:bromide tracer   oxygen  in situ flux   irrigation   bioturbation   lander   North Sea
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