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Relative importance of pelagic and sediment respiration in causing hypoxia in a deep estuary
Author(s) -
Bourgault D.,
Cyr F.,
Galbraith P. S.,
Pelletier E.
Publication year - 2012
Publication title -
journal of geophysical research: oceans
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.67
H-Index - 298
eISSN - 2156-2202
pISSN - 0148-0227
DOI - 10.1029/2012jc007902
Subject(s) - pelagic zone , benthic zone , oxygen , oceanography , sediment , turbulence , estuary , hypoxia (environmental) , geology , respiration , environmental science , chemistry , biology , meteorology , paleontology , physics , botany , organic chemistry
Oxygen depletion in the 100‐m thick bottom layer of the deep Lower St. Lawrence Estuary is currently thought to be principally caused by benthic oxygen demand overcoming turbulent oxygenation from overlying layers, with pelagic respiration playing a secondary role. This conception is revisited with idealized numerical simulations, historical oxygen observations and new turbulence measurements. Results indicate that a dominant sediment oxygen demand, over pelagic, is incompatible with the shape of observed oxygen profiles. It is further argued that to sustain oxygen depletion, the turbulent diffusivity in the bottom waters should be ≪10 −4 m 2 s −1 , consistent with direct measurements but contrary to previous model results. A new model that includes an Arrhenius‐type function for pelagic respiration and a parameterization for turbulence diffusivity is developed. The model demonstrates the importance of the bottom boundary layer in reproducing the shape of oxygen profiles and reproduces to within 14% the observed change in oxygen concentration in the Lower St. Lawrence Estuary. The analysis indicates that turbulent oxygenation represents about 8% of the sum of sediment and pelagic oxygen demand, consistent with the low turbulent oxygenation required to maintain oxygen depletion. However, contrary to previous hypotheses, it is concluded that pelagic oxygen demand needs to be five time larger than sediment oxygen demand to explain hypoxia in the 100‐m thick bottom layer of the Lower St. Lawrence Estuary.

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