4.6 Article

Spectral Characterization of Dissolved Organic Matter in Seawater and Sediment Pore Water from the Arctic Fjords (West Svalbard) in Summer

Journal

WATER
Volume 13, Issue 2, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/w13020202

Keywords

dissolved organic matter; excitation emission matrix; glaciofluvial runoff; ice algal bloom; Arctic glaciomarine sediment

Funding

  1. National Research Foundation of Korea (NRF) - Korean government (MSIP) [2020R1A4A2002823]
  2. Korea Polar Research Institute [PM18050, NP2018-022, 20160247]
  3. key discipline fund in environmental science and engineering from Guangdong Province, China
  4. National Research Council for Economics, Humanities & Social Sciences, Republic of Korea [20160247] Funding Source: Korea Institute of Science & Technology Information (KISTI), National Science & Technology Information Service (NTIS)

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The study revealed higher levels of terrestrial inputs and glaciofluvial runoffs in the Arctic fjords, especially in the southern Hornsund fjord. Extremely high levels of protein-like fluorescence were observed in summer at partially sea ice-covered fjords, consistent with near-ubiquity ice-edge blooms observed in the Arctic.
Fjords in the high Arctic, as aquatic critical zones at the interface of land-ocean continuum, are undergoing rapid changes due to glacier retreat and climate warming. Yet, little is known about the biogeochemical processes in the Arctic fjords. We measured the nutrients and the optical properties of dissolved organic matter (DOM) in both seawater and sediment pore water, along with the remote sensing data of the ocean surface, from three West Svalbard fjords. A cross-fjord comparison of fluorescence fingerprints together with downcore trends of salinity, Cl-, and PO43- revealed higher impact of terrestrial inputs (fluorescence index: similar to 1.2-1.5 in seawaters) and glaciofluvial runoffs (salinity: similar to 31.4 +/- 2.4 psu in pore waters) to the southern fjord of Hornsund as compared to the northern fjords of Isfjorden and Van Mijenfjorden, tallying with heavier annual runoff to the southern fjord of Hornsund. Extremely high levels of protein-like fluorescence (up to similar to 4.5 RU) were observed at the partially sea ice-covered fjords in summer, in line with near-ubiquity ice-edge blooms observed in the Arctic. The results reflect an ongoing or post-phytoplankton bloom, which is also supported by the higher levels of chlorophyll a fluorescence at the ocean surface, the very high apparent oxygen utilization through the water column, and the nutrient drawdown at the ocean surface. Meanwhile, a characteristic elongated fluorescence fingerprint was observed in the fjords, presumably produced by ice-edge blooms in the Arctic ecosystems. Furthermore, alkalinity and the humic-like peaks showed a general downcore accumulation trend, which implies the production of humic-like DOM via a biological pathway also in the glaciomarine sediments from the Arctic fjords.

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