4.7 Article

Early Diagenesis in the Hypoxic and Acidified Zone of the Northern Gulf of Mexico: Is Organic Matter Recycling in Sediments Disconnected From the Water Column?

Journal

FRONTIERS IN MARINE SCIENCE
Volume 8, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fmars.2021.604330

Keywords

diagenesis; hypoxia; acidification; organic matter; continental shelf; oxygen; sediments; RiOMar

Funding

  1. INSU-EC2CO/LEFE MissRhoDia project
  2. NSF [OCE-1438648]
  3. National Academies of Science, Engineering, and Medicine Gulf Research Program [2000007281]
  4. Chateaubriand Fellowship of the Office for Science and Technology of the Embassy of France in the United States (MOPGA program)
  5. United States National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration [NA16OAR4320199]
  6. National Science Foundation [OCE-1559312]

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The study investigated the diagenetic processes in bottom waters of four stations on the continental shelf in the northern Gulf of Mexico influenced by river inputs and seasonal hypoxia. The results showed that oxygen consumption linked to organic matter recycling was significant, but low oxygen conditions did not promote anoxic diagenesis as expected due to a limitation in organic substrate supply.
Hypoxia and associated acidification are growing concerns for ecosystems and biogeochemical cycles in the coastal zone. The northern Gulf of Mexico (nGoM) has experienced large seasonal hypoxia for decades linked to the eutrophication of the continental shelf fueled by the Mississippi River nutrient discharge. Sediments play a key role in maintaining hypoxic and acidified bottom waters, but this role is still not completely understood. In the summer 2017, when the surface area of the hypoxic zone in the nGoM was the largest ever recorded, we investigated four stations on the continental shelf differentially influenced by river inputs of the Mississippi-Atchafalaya River System and seasonal hypoxia. We investigated diagenetic processes under normoxic, hypoxic, and nearly anoxic bottom waters by coupling amperometric, potentiometric, and voltammetric microprofiling with high-resolution diffusive equilibrium in thin-films (DET) profiles and porewater analyses. In addition, we used a time-series of bottom-water dissolved oxygen from May to November 2017, which indicated intense O-2 consumption in bottom waters related to organic carbon recycling. At the sediment-water interface (SWI), we found that oxygen consumption linked to organic matter recycling was large with diffusive oxygen uptake (DOU) of 8 and 14 mmol m(-2) d(-1), except when the oxygen concentration was near anoxia (5 mmol m(-2) d(-1)). Except at the station located near the Mississippi river outlet, the downcore pore water sulfate concentration decrease was limited, with little increase in alkalinity, dissolved inorganic carbon (DIC), ammonium, and phosphate suggesting that low oxygen conditions did not promote anoxic diagenesis as anticipated. We attributed the low anoxic diagenesis intensity to a limitation in organic substrate supply, possibly linked to the reduction of bioturbation during the hypoxic spring and summer.

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