TY - JOUR
T1 - Cycling and Budgets of Organic and Black Carbon in Coastal Bohai Sea, China
T2 - Impacts of Natural and Anthropogenic Perturbations
AU - Fang, Yin
AU - Chen, Yingjun
AU - Tian, Chongguo
AU - Wang, Xiaoping
AU - Lin, Tian
AU - Hu, Limin
AU - Li, Jun
AU - Zhang, Gan
AU - Luo, Yongming
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
©2018. American Geophysical Union. All Rights Reserved.
PY - 2018/6
Y1 - 2018/6
N2 - Organic carbon (OC) cycling in coastal seas that connect terrestrial and open oceanic ecosystems is a dynamic and disproportionately important component of oceanic and global carbon cycles. However, OC cycling in coastal seas needs to be better constrained, particularly for geochemically important black carbon (BC). In this study, we conducted multimedium sampling campaigns, including atmospheric deposition, river water, seawater, and sediments in coastal Bohai Sea (BS) in China. We simultaneously quantified particulate OC (POC), particulate BC (PBC), dissolved OC (DOC), and dissolved BC (DBC) and investigated the cycling and budgets of OC and BC. The cycling and budgets of each individual particulate phase (i.e., POC versus PBC) and dissolved phase (i.e., DOC versus DBC) displayed similar patterns, but there were some distinct differences between the particulate and dissolved phases. In the particulate phases, atmospheric and riverine delivery dominated exogenous inputs (>80%), sequestration to sediments dominated removal (~70%), and exchanges in the Bohai Strait resulted in net export. In the dissolved phases, exchanges in the Bohai Strait dominated both import and export and were in a relatively dynamic equilibrium. We found that both natural perturbations, such as spring dust storms, and anthropogenic activity, exerted significant impacts on BS carbon cycling. The integration of regional and global source-to-sink process databases made it clear that future BC studies should calculate PBC and DBC fluxes independently. Continuous field observational studies, more details of the biogeochemical processes involved, and consistent BC quantification methods are urgently needed to elucidate coastal OC and BC cycling.
AB - Organic carbon (OC) cycling in coastal seas that connect terrestrial and open oceanic ecosystems is a dynamic and disproportionately important component of oceanic and global carbon cycles. However, OC cycling in coastal seas needs to be better constrained, particularly for geochemically important black carbon (BC). In this study, we conducted multimedium sampling campaigns, including atmospheric deposition, river water, seawater, and sediments in coastal Bohai Sea (BS) in China. We simultaneously quantified particulate OC (POC), particulate BC (PBC), dissolved OC (DOC), and dissolved BC (DBC) and investigated the cycling and budgets of OC and BC. The cycling and budgets of each individual particulate phase (i.e., POC versus PBC) and dissolved phase (i.e., DOC versus DBC) displayed similar patterns, but there were some distinct differences between the particulate and dissolved phases. In the particulate phases, atmospheric and riverine delivery dominated exogenous inputs (>80%), sequestration to sediments dominated removal (~70%), and exchanges in the Bohai Strait resulted in net export. In the dissolved phases, exchanges in the Bohai Strait dominated both import and export and were in a relatively dynamic equilibrium. We found that both natural perturbations, such as spring dust storms, and anthropogenic activity, exerted significant impacts on BS carbon cycling. The integration of regional and global source-to-sink process databases made it clear that future BC studies should calculate PBC and DBC fluxes independently. Continuous field observational studies, more details of the biogeochemical processes involved, and consistent BC quantification methods are urgently needed to elucidate coastal OC and BC cycling.
KW - Bohai Sea
KW - black carbon
KW - coastal seas
KW - cycling and budgets
KW - organic carbon
KW - spring dust storms
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/85049773570
U2 - 10.1029/2017GB005863
DO - 10.1029/2017GB005863
M3 - 文章
AN - SCOPUS:85049773570
SN - 0886-6236
VL - 32
SP - 971
EP - 986
JO - Global Biogeochemical Cycles
JF - Global Biogeochemical Cycles
IS - 6
ER -