Abstract
Despite their importance for long-term climate regulation, the rates and mechanisms of seafloor carbonate dissolution are poorly understood, especially with respect to calcite saturation and the role of sedimentary metabolic CO2 production. Here, we present results from an in situ porewater sampler deployed at the Cocos Ridge in the eastern equatorial Pacific, where we examine seafloor carbonate dissolution in locations with bottom water Ωcalcite ranging from 1.0 to 0.84 (1600–3200 m). With cm-scale resolution from the sediment–water interface to 35 cm, we present porewater profiles of total alkalinity, pH, dissolved inorganic carbon (DIC), δ13C of DIC, Ωcalcite, [Mn], [Ca], and [Sr], as well as solid phase porosity, % CaCO3, and % organic C. These profiles provide evidence that deep-sea sedimentary carbonate dissolution occurs via sediment-side control, wherein dissolution is dominated by sedimentary processes rather than strictly bottom water saturation state. We estimate dissolution fluxes using three independent approaches: alkalinity fluxes, δ13C of DIC combined with DIC fluxes, and [Ca] fluxes. We report seafloor dissolution fluxes with uncertainties < 38 %: 40 ± 15, 98 ± 20, 100 ± 32, and 89 ± 27 μmol CaCO3/m2/day at sites 3200, 2900, 2700, and 1600 m deep, respectively. The magnitude of dissolution fluxes is a function of bottom water saturation state (Ωcalcite), bottom water dissolved oxygen, and sedimentary CaCO3 content, but not correlated with any of these parameters independently. We observe dissolution occurring at all stations, including where bottom water is saturated with respect to calcite, and present evidence that this occurs through respiration-driven dissolution within the sediment. At all sites, porewater Ωcalcite decreases below bottom water values before increasing toward saturation deeper in the sediment. Using the δ13C of DIC, we partition the DIC fluxes across the sediment–water interface and find 21–48 % of DIC is sourced from CaCO3 dissolution, with the remainder sourced from organic matter respiration. We present a sedimentary mass balance, assembled with dissolution rates and mass accumulation rates obtained through Δ14C of foraminiferal calcite, and calculate CaCO3 burial efficiencies between 2 and 67 %, inversely correlating with water depth. Our results also provide evidence that net chemical erosion of 5,000––10,000 year old carbonate is occurring at the deepest site. Aerobic organic C respiration coupled with sedimentary CaCO3 dissolution, as documented here, will provide more alkalinity to bottom waters than from undersaturation-driven dissolution alone. This process can neutralize anthropogenic CO2 at the seafloor in a larger range of saturation states than previously estimated.
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