Title of article :
Effect of emersion and immersion on the porewater nutrient dynamics of an intertidal sandflat in Tokyo Bay
Author/Authors :
Tomohiro Kuwae، نويسنده , , Eiji Kibe، نويسنده , , Yoshiyuki Nakamura، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2003
Abstract :
Porewater nutrient dynamics during emersion and immersion were investigated during different seasons in a eutrophic intertidal
sandflat of Tokyo Bay, Japan, to elucidate the role of emersion and immersion in solute transport and microbial processes. The
water content in the surface sediment did not change significantly following emersion, suggesting that advective solute transport
caused by water table fluctuation was negligible. The rate of change in nitrate concentration in the top 10mm of sediments ranged
from 6.6 to 4.8 lmolNl 1 bulk sed. h 1 during the whole period of emersion. Steep nutrient concentration gradients in the surface
sediment generated diffusive flux of nutrients directed downwards into deeper sediments, which greatly contributed to the observed
rates of change in porewater nutrient concentration for several cases. Microbial nitrate reduction within the subsurface sediment
appeared to be strongly supported by the downward diffusive flux of nitrate from the surface sediment. The stimulation of estimated
nitrate production rate in the subsurface layer in proportion to the emersion time indicates that oxygenation due to emersion caused
changes in the sediment redox environment and affected the nitrification and/or nitrate reduction rates. The nitrate and soluble
reactive phosphorus pools in the top 10mm of sediment decreased markedly during immersion (up to 68% for nitrate and up to
44% for soluble reactive phosphorus), however, this result could not be solely explained by molecular diffusion.
Keywords :
interstitial nutrients , eutrophication , Oxygenation , Banzu tidal flat , nitrogen and phosphorus cycles , microbial processes , diffusive fluxes
Journal title :
Estuarine, Coastal and Shelf Science
Journal title :
Estuarine, Coastal and Shelf Science