4.7 Article

Impact of sea-ice processes on the carbonate system and ocean acidification at the ice-water interface of the Amundsen Gulf, Arctic Ocean

Journal

JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH-OCEANS
Volume 118, Issue 12, Pages 7001-7023

Publisher

AMER GEOPHYSICAL UNION
DOI: 10.1002/2013JC009164

Keywords

CO2 system; frost flower; calcium-carbonate saturation; air-sea CO2 flux; brine; biological processes; melt water; polynya; Circumpolar Flaw Lead System study; Canadian Arctic

Categories

Funding

  1. Swedish Research Council [2009-2994, 2008-6228]
  2. Royal Society of Arts and Sciences in Sweden
  3. Canadian Natural Science and Engineering Research Council
  4. ArcticNet
  5. Fisheries and Oceans Canada
  6. MetOcean DataSystems

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From sea-ice formation in November 2007 to onset of ice melt in May 2008, we studied the carbonate system in first-year Arctic sea ice, focusing on the impact of calcium-carbonate (CaCO3) saturation states of aragonite (Ar) and calcite (Ca) at the ice-water interface (UIW). Based on total inorganic carbon (C-T) and total alkalinity (A(T)), and derived pH, CO2, carbonate ion ([CO32-]) concentrations and , we investigated the major drivers such as brine rejection, CaCO3 precipitation, bacterial respiration, primary production and CO2-gas flux in sea ice, brine, frost flowers and UIW. We estimated large variability in sea-ice C-T at the top, mid, and bottom ice. Changes due to CaCO3 and CO2-gas flux had large impact on C-T in the whole ice core from March to May, bacterial respiration was important at the bottom ice during all months, and primary production in May. It was evident that the sea-ice processes had large impact on UIW, resulting in a five times larger seasonal amplitude of the carbonate system, relative to the upper 20 m. During ice formation, [CO2] increased by 30 mu mol kg(-1), [CO32-] decreased by 50 mu mol kg(-1), and the Ar decreased by 0.8 in the UIW due to CO2-enriched brine from solid CaCO3. Conversely, during ice melt, [CO32-] increased by 90 mu mol kg(-1) in the UIW, and increased by 1.4 between March and May, likely due to CaCO3 dissolution and primary production. We estimated that increased ice melt would lead to enhanced oceanic uptake of inorganic carbon to the surface layer.

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