Document Type
Article
Department/Program
Virginia Institute of Marine Science
Publication Date
1-16-2020
Journal
JGR Oceans
Volume
125
Issue
1
First Page
e2019JC015609
Abstract
The Chesapeake Bay, a large coastal plain estuary, has been studied extensively in terms of its water quality, and yet, comparatively less is known about its carbonate system. Here we present discrete observations of dissolved inorganic carbon (DIC) and total alkalinity from four seasonal cruises in 2016–2017. These new observations are used to characterize the regional CO2 system and to construct a DIC budget of the mainstem. In all seasons, elevated DIC concentrations were observed at the mouth of the bay associated with inflowing Atlantic Ocean waters, while minimum concentrations of DIC were associated with fresher waters at the head of the bay. Significant spatial variability of the partial pressure of CO2 was observed throughout the mainstem, with net uptake of atmospheric CO2 during each season in the upper mainstem and weak seasonal outgassing of CO2 near the outflow to the Atlantic Ocean. During the time frame of this study, the Chesapeake Bay mainstem was (1) net autotrophic in the mixed layer (net community production of 0.31‐mol C m−2·year−1) and net heterotrophic throughout the water column (net community production of −0.48‐mol C m−2·year−1), (2) a sink of 0.38‐mol C m−2·year−1 for atmospheric CO2, and (3) significantly seasonally and spatially variable with respect to biologically driven changes in DIC.
DATA available at: https://doi.org/10.25773/rntn‐ez18
DOI
10.1029/2019JC015609
Keywords
dissolved inorganic carbon, carbon cycling
Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-No Derivative Works 4.0 International License.
Recommended Citation
Friedman, Jaclyn R.; Shadwick, Elizabeth H.; Friedrichs, Marjorie A.M.; Najjar, Raymond G.; De Meo, Olivia A.; Da, Fei; and Smith, Juliette L., Seasonal Variability of the CO2 System in a Large Coastal Plain Estuary (2020). JGR Oceans, 125(1), e2019JC015609.
10.1029/2019JC015609