Abstract

AbstractVargas and collaborators (Vargas et al., 2018), therein V2018, reported measurements of pH, total alkalinity (AT), dissolved inorganic carbon (CT), dissolved oxygen (DO) and other hydrographic variables along a portion of the Strait of Magellan and associated fjords during the spring of 2010. Using the measured values of AT and pH to calculate the partial pressure of CO2 (pCO2), they showed that DO supersaturated waters in the upper 50 m depth were often associated with pCO2 higher than atmospheric CO2 levels. Here we show that this anomalous pattern arises because V2018′s carbonate system parameters were apparently incorrectly calculated, resulting in positively biased pCO2 values. AT measurements in this layer were often higher than the marine end‐member, which could indicate an additional source of bias. Biased carbonate system parameters used by V2018 imply a sub‐estimation of the capacity of CO2 uptake, with important consequences for local capacity to modulate the potential deleterious effects of freshening and ocean acidification on fjord biota. The critical analysis of the global sources of uncertainty in carbonate‐system parameters, and evaluation of internal and external consistency (i.e., with complementary hydrographic information or with previous reports), are necessary to detect bias, and generate data with sufficient quality to study the effect of ocean acidification on marine ecosystems (GOA‐ON, 2019).

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