Close and delayed benthic-pelagic coupling in coastal ecosystems: the roleof physical constraints

Citation
M. Vidal et Ja. Morgui, Close and delayed benthic-pelagic coupling in coastal ecosystems: the roleof physical constraints, HYDROBIOL, 429(1-3), 2000, pp. 105-113
Citations number
46
Categorie Soggetti
Aquatic Sciences
Journal title
HYDROBIOLOGIA
ISSN journal
00188158 → ACNP
Volume
429
Issue
1-3
Year of publication
2000
Pages
105 - 113
Database
ISI
SICI code
0018-8158(200006)429:1-3<105:CADBCI>2.0.ZU;2-9
Abstract
We aimed to analyse the temporal scales of the variability of benthic ammon ium flux using data from an estuarine bay (Alfacs Bay, N. W. Mediterranean) . Several nitrogen (N) pools in the sediment, their reactivities and their associated fluxes were estimated. Decomposition of labile buried N (4.5 mol N m(-2)) was found to cause an ammonium flux of 0.1 mmol N m(-2) d(-1), re ferred to as background flux. The fluxes measured from bell-jar incubations were usually higher, between 2 and 6 mmol N m(-2) d(-1), which reflects mi neralization of recent sedimentation. A typical sedimentation event was fou nd to account for 25 - 75 mmol m(-2) of freshly settled N, which should bri ng on an ammonium flux of about 1.7-5.0 mmol N m(-2) d(-1), referred to as fast flux. The concordance between measured and computed benthic fluxes is associated with the coupling of benthic fluxes to production and sedimentat ion. Close benthic-pelagic coupling was observed in winter and early spring , while a delayed flux response to sedimentation, with transient variations of pore water ammonium profiles, showing surface peaks and decreasing conc entrations with depth, was found in autumn. Structures, such as viscous lay ers, which develop over the sediment-water interface, were found to be esse ntial to the regulation of benthic processes and to lead to transient varia tions of pore water nutrient concentrations and associated fluxes. The temp oral scales of the benthic flux response to sedimentation were discussed in terms of the physical structures involved in decomposition (the bulk sedim ent, the viscous layers or the fresh settled layer), the processes controll ing kinetics and diffusion laws. Several scenarios for the benthic- pelagic coupling in Alfacs Bay, in which local (estuarine circulation) and climati c components combine to yield the variability observed, were examined.