Abstract

Riverine carbon flux to the ocean has been considered in estimating coastal carbon budgets, but submarine groundwater discharge (SGD) has long been ignored. In this paper, the effects of both SGD and river discharges on the carbon cycle were investigated in the Guangdong-HongKong-Macao Greater Bay Area (GBA), a highly urbanized and river-dominated coastal area in China. SGD-derived nitrate (NO3–), dissolved organic carbon (DOC), and dissolved inorganic carbon (DIC) fluxes were estimated using a radium model to be (0.73–16.4) × 108 g/d, (0.60–9.94) × 109 g/d, and (0.77–3.29) × 1010 g/d, respectively. SGD-derived DOC and DIC fluxes are ∼2 times as great as riverine inputs, but SGD-derived NO3– flux is one-fourth of the riverine input. The additional nitrate and carbon inputs can stimulate new primary production, enhance biological pump efficiency, and affect the balance of the carbonate system in marine water. We found that SGD in the studied system is a potential net source of atmospheric CO2 with a flux of 1.46 × 109 g C/d, and river, however, is a potential net sink of atmospheric CO2 with a flux of 3.75 × 109 g C/d during the dry winter season. Two conceptual models were proposed illustrating the major potential processes of the carbon cycle induced by SGD and river discharges. These findings from this study suggested that SGD, as important as rivers, plays a significant role in the carbon cycle and should be considered in carbon budget estimations at regional and global scales future.

Highlights

  • Nutrient budgets in the ocean are subject to a variety of influences such as surface rivers, submarine groundwater discharge (SGD), and the atmosphere

  • It can be found that nitrate fluxes from SGD and river to the Greater Bay Area (GBA) were greater in the wet summer season than in the dry winter season

  • Only a fraction of the organic carbon produced by the river was transported to the deep ocean and stored there. Both SGD and river-derived nitrate and carbon fluxes and their impacts on the carbon cycle were investigated in the GBA, China

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Summary

Introduction

Nutrient budgets in the ocean are subject to a variety of influences such as surface rivers, submarine groundwater discharge (SGD), and the atmosphere. Liu et al (2020) showed that the organic C/N ratio in the Pearl River decreased from 11.8 to 5.0 after the river passed through several big cities. Such variations in nutrient/carbon flux and composition will change the carbon cycle (e.g., stimulating new primary production and enhancing biological pump efficiency) in coastal oceans, and have a significant implication for estimating coastal carbon budgets (Liu et al, 2020; Ye et al, 2021)

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