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Water column

About: Water column is a research topic. Over the lifetime, 13706 publications have been published within this topic receiving 496626 citations.


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TL;DR: The authors studied the nitrogen biogeochemistry of the ice-covered eastern Bering Sea shelf using the isotope ratios (15N/14N and 18O/16O) of NO3− and other N species.
Abstract: [1] We studied the nitrogen biogeochemistry of the ice-covered eastern Bering Sea shelf using the isotope ratios (15N/14N and 18O/16O) of NO3− and other N species. The 15N/14N of late winter NO3− on the shelf decreases inshore and is inversely correlated with bottom water [NH4+], consistent with an input of low-15N/14N NO3− from partial nitrification of NH4+ remineralized from the sediments. An inshore 15N/14N increase in total dissolved N (TDN) suggests that (1) the sediment-derived NH4+ is elevated in 15N due to the same partial nitrification that yields the low-15N/14N NO3−, and (2) 15N-deplete NO3− from partial nitrification within the sediments is denitrified to N2. The proportion of newly nitrified NO3− on the shelf, evidenced by an inshore decrease in NO3− 18O/16O, is correlated with the N deficit, further implicating nitrification coupled to denitrification; however, a simple N isotope budget indicates a comparable rate of denitrification supported by diffusion of NO3− into the sediments. The isotopic impact of benthic N loss is further demonstrated by a correlation between the 15N/14N of shelf surface sediment and the N deficit of the overlying water column, both of which increase inshore and northward, as well as by Arctic NO3− isotope data indicating that the fixed N transported through Bering Strait has a 15N/14N higher than is found in the open Bering Sea. The significant net isotope effect of benthic N loss on the Bering shelf, 6–8 ‰, is at odds with previous assumptions regarding the global ocean's N isotope budget.

122 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is proposed that the grazing capacity of the expatriated mesozooplankton population would match the potential seasonal increase of primary production in the future decreased ice perspective, diminishing the likelihood of algal blooms.

122 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, a time-series study was conducted in the South China Sea (SCS) to understand how various types of physical forcing influence biogeochemical cycles in the water column.

122 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A mathematical model for plankton, nutrient (phosphate, ammonia and nitrate) and oxygen dynamics in lakes was developed and was able to reproduce the key features of the nutrient and oxygen profiles and of algae–zooplankton interactions over several years but was not able to predict occasionally occurring blooms of specific types of algae.

122 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The data indicate that restored shellfish reefs should provide water-quality improvements soon after construction, and the overall impact is probably determined by the size and density of the resident filter feeder populations relative to water flow characteristics over the reef.
Abstract: An important ecological role ascribed to oysters is the transfer of materials from the water column to the benthos as they feed on suspended particles (seston). This ecosystem service has been often touted as a major reason for many oyster restoration efforts, but empirical characterization and quantification of seston removal rates in the field have been lacking. Changes in chlorophyll a (chl a) concentrations in the water column were measured in May 2005 and June 2006 in South Carolina using in situ fluorometry and laboratory analysis of pumped water samples taken upstream and downstream as water flowed over natural and constructed intertidal oyster reefs. Both methods gave similar results overall, but with wide variability within individual reef datasets. In situ fluorometer data logged at 10 to 30-s intervals for up to 1.3 h over eight different reefs (three natural and five constructed) showed total removal (or uptake) expressed as % removal of chl a ranging from −9.8% to 27.9%, with a mean of 12.9%. Our data indicate that restored shellfish reefs should provide water-quality improvements soon after construction, and the overall impact is probably determined by the size and density of the resident filter feeder populations relative to water flow characteristics over the reef. The measured population-level chl a removal was converted to mean individual clearance rates to allow comparison with previous laboratory studies. Although direct comparisons could not be made due to the small size of oysters on the study reefs (mean shell height, 36.1 mm), our calculated rates (mean, 1.21 L h−1) were similar to published laboratory measured rates for oysters of this size. However, the wide variability in measured removal by the oyster reefs suggests that individual oyster feeding rates in nature may be much more variable than in the laboratory. The proliferation of ecosystem-level models that simulate the impacts of bivalves on water quality based only on laboratory-feeding measurements underscores the importance of further research aimed at determining ecologically realistic feeding rates for oysters in the field. Because in situ methods provide many replicate measurements quickly, they represent a potentially powerful tool for quantifying the effects of oyster reefs, including all suspension-feeding taxa present, on water quality.

122 citations


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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers in the topic in previous years
YearPapers
2023458
2022969
2021497
2020502
2019502
2018466