Seasonal variability of benthic ammonium release in the surface sediments of the Gulf of Gdansk (southern Baltic Sea)

This paper describes the seasonal and spatial variations of diffusive sediment- water ammonium fluxes in the western part of the Gulf of Gdansk (southern Baltic). It assesses the potential environmental controls of these fluxes, such as the inflow of organic matter to bottom sediments and its qua...

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Published in:Oceanologia
Main Author: Dorota Maksymowska-Brossard
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Institute of Oceanology of the Polish Academy of Sciences 2001-03-01
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.iopan.gda.pl/oceanologia/43_1.html#A6
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author Dorota Maksymowska-Brossard
author_facet Dorota Maksymowska-Brossard
author_sort Dorota Maksymowska-Brossard
collection DOAJ
container_title Oceanologia
description This paper describes the seasonal and spatial variations of diffusive sediment- water ammonium fluxes in the western part of the Gulf of Gdansk (southern Baltic). It assesses the potential environmental controls of these fluxes, such as the inflow of organic matter to bottom sediments and its quality, temperature-induced degradation of organic matter, and the redox potential of sediments. Ammonium fluxes, calculated using Fick's first law, were always in the direction from the sediment into the water column and differed significantly with respect to sediment type. Fluxes were most intensive in sediments with the highest silt-clay fraction located in the deepest parts of the study area. The mean annual diffusive fluxes of ammonium from sediments to near-bottom water were estimated at 5.24 tonnes km<sup>-2</sup> year<sup>-1</sup> for silty-clays, 1.85 tonnes km<sup>-2</sup> year<sup>-1</sup> for silty-sands and 1.03 tonnes km<sup>-2</sup> year<sup>-1</sup> for sandy sediments. There was a high seasonal variation, with the greatest ammonium release in summer and early autumn, when the temperature of near-bottom water was the highest. On the basis of the calculated diffusive ammonium fluxes, we estimated that approximately 2700 tonnes of N-NH<sub>4</sub><sup>+</sup> are released annually from the surface sediments of the western part of the Gulf of Gdansk, providing a minimum of 10% of the mineral nitrogen essential for primary production in surface waters. Our results are undoubtedly underestimated, as we disregarded advective ammonium fluxes, which in some areas of the Gulf of Gdansk could well be comparable to diffusive fluxes.
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spelling doaj-c19284cef1ed472c9b3497a7a6f0366e2025-11-02T20:47:09ZengInstitute of Oceanology of the Polish Academy of SciencesOceanologia0078-32342001-03-01431113136Seasonal variability of benthic ammonium release in the surface sediments of the Gulf of Gdansk (southern Baltic Sea)Dorota Maksymowska-BrossardThis paper describes the seasonal and spatial variations of diffusive sediment- water ammonium fluxes in the western part of the Gulf of Gdansk (southern Baltic). It assesses the potential environmental controls of these fluxes, such as the inflow of organic matter to bottom sediments and its quality, temperature-induced degradation of organic matter, and the redox potential of sediments. Ammonium fluxes, calculated using Fick's first law, were always in the direction from the sediment into the water column and differed significantly with respect to sediment type. Fluxes were most intensive in sediments with the highest silt-clay fraction located in the deepest parts of the study area. The mean annual diffusive fluxes of ammonium from sediments to near-bottom water were estimated at 5.24 tonnes km<sup>-2</sup> year<sup>-1</sup> for silty-clays, 1.85 tonnes km<sup>-2</sup> year<sup>-1</sup> for silty-sands and 1.03 tonnes km<sup>-2</sup> year<sup>-1</sup> for sandy sediments. There was a high seasonal variation, with the greatest ammonium release in summer and early autumn, when the temperature of near-bottom water was the highest. On the basis of the calculated diffusive ammonium fluxes, we estimated that approximately 2700 tonnes of N-NH<sub>4</sub><sup>+</sup> are released annually from the surface sediments of the western part of the Gulf of Gdansk, providing a minimum of 10% of the mineral nitrogen essential for primary production in surface waters. Our results are undoubtedly underestimated, as we disregarded advective ammonium fluxes, which in some areas of the Gulf of Gdansk could well be comparable to diffusive fluxes.http://www.iopan.gda.pl/oceanologia/43_1.html#A6AmmoniumBenthic fluxesEhSedimentsSouthern Baltic Sea
spellingShingle Dorota Maksymowska-Brossard
Seasonal variability of benthic ammonium release in the surface sediments of the Gulf of Gdansk (southern Baltic Sea)
Ammonium
Benthic fluxes
Eh
Sediments
Southern Baltic Sea
title Seasonal variability of benthic ammonium release in the surface sediments of the Gulf of Gdansk (southern Baltic Sea)
title_full Seasonal variability of benthic ammonium release in the surface sediments of the Gulf of Gdansk (southern Baltic Sea)
title_fullStr Seasonal variability of benthic ammonium release in the surface sediments of the Gulf of Gdansk (southern Baltic Sea)
title_full_unstemmed Seasonal variability of benthic ammonium release in the surface sediments of the Gulf of Gdansk (southern Baltic Sea)
title_short Seasonal variability of benthic ammonium release in the surface sediments of the Gulf of Gdansk (southern Baltic Sea)
title_sort seasonal variability of benthic ammonium release in the surface sediments of the gulf of gdansk southern baltic sea
topic Ammonium
Benthic fluxes
Eh
Sediments
Southern Baltic Sea
url http://www.iopan.gda.pl/oceanologia/43_1.html#A6
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