Journal article
Seasonal variability of calcium carbonate precipitation and dissolution in shallow coral reef sediments
Limnology and Oceanography, Vol.65(4), pp.876-891
2020
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Abstract
Shallow, permeable calcium carbonate (CaCO3) sediments make up a large proportion of the benthic cover on coral reefs and account for a large fraction of the standing stock of CaCO3. There have been a number of laboratory, mesocosm, and in situ studies examining shallow sediment metabolism and dissolution, but none of these have considered seasonal variability. Advective benthic chambers were used to measure in situ net community calcification (NCC) rates of CaCO3 sediments on Heron Island, Australia (Great Barrier Reef) over an annual cycle. Sediments were, on average, net precipitating during the day and net dissolving at night throughout the year. Night dissolution rates (−NCCNIGHT) were highest in the austral autumn and lowest in the austral winter driven by changes in respiration (R) and to a lesser extent temperature and Ωarag/pH. Similarly, precipitation during the day (+NCCDAY) was highest in March and lowest in winter, driven primarily by benthic net primary production (NPP) and temperature. On average, sediments were net precipitating over a diel cycle (NCC24h) but shifted to net dissolving in July and December. This shift was largely caused by the differential effects of seasonal cycles in organic metabolism and carbonate chemistry on NCCDAY and NCCNIGHT. The results from this study highlight the large variability in sediment CaCO3 dynamics and the need to include repeated measurements over different months and seasons, particularly in shallow reef systems that can experience large swings in light, temperature, and carbonate chemistry.
Details
- Title
- Seasonal variability of calcium carbonate precipitation and dissolution in shallow coral reef sediments
- Creators
- Laura Stoltenberg - Southern Cross UniversityKai G Schulz - Southern Cross UniversityTyler Cyronak - Southern Cross UniversityBradley D Eyre - Southern Cross University
- Publication Details
- Limnology and Oceanography, Vol.65(4), pp.876-891
- Publisher
- John Wiley & Sons ; Hoboken, USA
- Number of pages
- 16
- Grants
- Dissolution of calcium carbonate in sediments in an acidifying ocean, DP150102092, Australian Research Council
- Grant note
- ARC Discovery (DP150102092)
- Identifiers
- 991012885400402368
- Copyright
- © 2019 Association for the Sciences of Limnology and Oceanography
- Academic Unit
- Faculty of Science and Engineering; School of Environment, Science and Engineering; Centre for Coastal Biogeochemistry; Science
- Language
- English
- Resource Type
- Journal article