Abstract

Preliminary studies with an ampule analyzing unit and infrared (IR) detector showed that procedures for standardization and determination of total carbon dioxide (ZCO,), while often precise, lacked the accuracy required to estimate the net productivity and respiration of aquatic ecosystems during studies in which sampling over diel cycles was used. Scaling down sample and standard volumes to the ~l range and the use of a commercial sodium carbonate standard without dilution before and after replicate sample injections gave accurate results as shown by comparison with indirect (pHalkalinity) ZC0 , determinations with a standard error of ? 3 pmoles in the laboratory and 2 6 pmoles at sea for 8 to 10 replicates. This was sufficient to detect a diurnal consumption and nocturnal production of CO, which were inversely correlated w ~ t h O2 variation in a salt marsh, an estuarine mesocosm, and the Canbbean Sea.

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