4.5 Article

Seasonal ecosystem metabolism across shallow benthic habitats measured by aquatic eddy covariance

Journal

LIMNOLOGY AND OCEANOGRAPHY LETTERS
Volume 4, Issue 3, Pages 79-86

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/lol2.10107

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Walter and Andree de Nottbeck Foundation
  2. Academy of Finland [294853]
  3. University of Helsinki, Denmark's Independent Research Fund [7014-00078]
  4. Stockholm University strategic fund for collaborative research (the Baltic Bridge initiative), Denmark's Independent Research Fund [7014-00078]
  5. European Commission through HADES-ERC [669947]
  6. European Commission through ATLAS [678760]
  7. US National Science Foundation [OCE-1061364, OCE-1334848]
  8. FINMARI (Finnish Marine Research Infrastructure network, The Academy of Finland) [283417]
  9. Academy of Finland (AKA) [283417] Funding Source: Academy of Finland (AKA)

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Shallow benthic habitats are hotspots for carbon cycling and energy flow, but metabolism (primary production and respiration) dynamics and habitat-specific differences remain poorly understood. We investigated daily, seasonal, and annual metabolism in six key benthic habitats in the Baltic Sea using similar to 2900h of in situ aquatic eddy covariance oxygen flux measurements. Rocky substrates had the highest metabolism rates. Habitat-specific annual primary production per m(2) was in the order Fucus vesiculosus canopy>Mytilus trossulus reef>Zostera marina canopy>mixed macrophytes canopy>sands, whereas respiration was in the order M. trossulus>F. vesiculosus>Z. marina>mixed macrophytes> sands>aphotic sediments. Winter metabolism contributed 22-31% of annual rates. Spatial upscaling revealed that benthic habitats drive >90% of ecosystem metabolism in waters <= 5 m depth, highlighting their central role in carbon and nutrient cycling in shallow waters.

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