Differences in seawater particulate organic carbon concentration in samples collected using small- and large-volume methods: the importance of DOC adsorption to the filter blank
Sb. Moran et al., Differences in seawater particulate organic carbon concentration in samples collected using small- and large-volume methods: the importance of DOC adsorption to the filter blank, MAR CHEM, 67(1-2), 1999, pp. 33-42
Particulate organic carbon (POC) data collected by small-volume (similar to
1-2 1) bottle filtration and large-volume (similar to 100-600 1) methods a
re compared for samples from the central Arctic, Equatorial Pacific, Equato
rial and South Atlantic, Gulf of Maine, and Narragansett Bay. Small-volume
samples were collected using Niskin(R) and Go-Flo(R) bottles and large-volu
me samples were collected using in situ pumps and large-volume bottle filtr
ation. Results indicate that small-volume bottle POC data are often greater
than large-volume results, by as much as 2-4 times, in regions with low PO
C concentration(< similar to 5 mu M). The implication is that POC concentra
tions determined by small-volume bottle filtration in regions characterized
by low POC concentrations, i.e., in the majority of surface open ocean and
deep waters, may be erroneously high. We suggest the most likely explanati
on is adsorption of DOC to the filter, which is rarely quantified yet can s
ignificantly increase the filter blank. The magnitude of DOC adsorption was
assessed using coastal seawater by determining the gamma-intercept of a pl
ot of the organic carbon retained by a glass-fiber filter against the volum
e filtered. The intercept was approximately two-fold greater than the preco
mbusted filter blank, which we attribute to DOC adsorbed to the filter. Thu
s, when seawater POC concentrations are similar to, or less than, the preco
mbusted filter blank, not correcting for the true in situ blank can result
in erroneously high POC concentrations. To avoid this artifact, we recommen
d using large-volume sampling methods, which result in a greater quantity o
f POC per unit area of the filter relative to the filter blank. When large-
volume filtration is not possible, we recommend a simple method to evaluate
the true in situ filter blank. (C) 1999 Elsevier Science B.V. All rights r
eserved.