Nutrient pore-water profiles, sediment-water exchange and sediment characte
ristics were measured for six intertidal mudflat sites throughout the Humbe
r Estuary over the different seasons. The Humber is a highly dynamic, non s
teady state system and hence neither the biogeochemical zones nor the macro
faunal communities were sustained for long periods of time. Sediment mixing
and resuspension on tidal, episodic or seasonal timescales was the predomi
nant control on nutrients, Over an annual cycle, mean measured fluxes were
-8.7 mmoles/m(2)/day nitrate, 3.7 mmoles/m(2)/day ammonia and 0.2 mmoles.m(
2)/day nitrite, Net phosphate and silicate fluxes were very small. The inte
rtidal mudflats were a sink for nitrate (-1000 kmol/day), a major source of
ammonia (430 kmol/day) and a minor source of nitrite (25 kmol/day), Nitrat
e influxes decreased in a seaward direction (-13.4 mmoles/m(2)/day in inner
estuary, -11.0 mmoles/m(2)/day in mid-estuary, -5.2 mmoles/m(2)/day in out
er estuary), but when the area of the mudflats in each area is taken into a
ccount, both the mid and outer estuary were sinks for approximately 40% of
the total nitrate taken up. In contrast, the outer estuary was the source o
f c. 90% of the ammonia and 105% of the nitrite (the inner estuary being a
minor sink of nitrite). (C) 1999 Elsevier Science Ltd. All rights reserved.