Abstract

The upwelling of deep waters from the oxygen minimum zone in the Northeast Pacific from the continental slope to the shelf and into the Salish Sea during spring and summer offers a unique opportunity to study ecosystem functioning in the form of benthic fluxes along natural gradients. Using the ROV ROPOS we collected sediment cores from 10 sites in May and July 2011, and September 2013 to perform shipboard incubations and flux measurements. Specifically, we measured benthic fluxes of oxygen and nutrients to evaluate potential environmental drivers of benthic flux variation and ecosystem functioning along natural gradients of temperature and bottom water dissolved oxygen concentrations. The range of temperature and dissolved oxygen encountered across our study sites allowed us to apply a suite of multivariate analyses rarely used in flux studies to identify bottom water temperature as the primary environmental driver of benthic flux variation and organic matter remineralization. Redundancy analysis revealed that bottom water characteristics (temperature and dissolved oxygen), quality of organic matter (chl a:phaeo and C:N ratios) and sediment characteristics (mean grain size and porosity) explained 51.5% of benthic flux variation. Multivariate analyses identified significant spatial and temporal variation in benthic fluxes, demonstrating key differences between the Northeast Pacific and Salish Sea. Moreover, Northeast Pacific slope fluxes were generally lower than shelf fluxes. Spatial and temporal variation in benthic fluxes in the Salish Sea were driven primarily by differences in temperature and quality of organic matter on the seafloor following phytoplankton blooms. These results demonstrate the utility of multivariate approaches in differentiating among potential drivers of seafloor ecosystem functioning, and indicate that current and future predictive models of organic matter remineralization and ecosystem functioning of soft-muddy shelf and slope seafloor habitats should consider bottom water temperature variation. Bottom temperature has important implications for estimates of seasonal and spatial benthic flux variation, benthic–pelagic coupling, and impacts of predicted ocean warming at high latitudes.

Highlights

  • Marine carbon, nitrogen, and phosphate cycles are linked through their fixation by phytoplankton in surface waters and their remineralization in the water column and on the seafloor [1]

  • Sediments generally released phosphate in the Salish Sea in contrast to uptake in the NE Pacific, with highest uptake (-955.4 μmol m-2 d-1) at BC300-09 and highest release (697.0 μmol m-2 d-1) at Strait of Georgia Central (SoGC)-05 (Fig 2E, S1 Appendix)

  • Our study indicates strong variation in spatial and temporal flux, driven primarily by differences in bottom water characteristics, quality of organic matter following significant deposition of particulate organic matter to the seafloor and, to a lesser extent, sediment characteristics (MGS and porosity)

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Summary

Introduction

Nitrogen, and phosphate cycles are linked through their fixation by phytoplankton in surface waters and their remineralization in the water column and on the seafloor [1]. The decomposition of organic matter on the seafloor and resulting early diagenetic reactions at the sediment–water interface significantly impact nutrient composition within the water column and associated ecosystem processes, releasing 25–80% of the essential nutrients (e.g., N, P, and Si) that fuel primary production in the photic zone of shallow water (

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