Measurements in the central Baltic Sea have shown that dissolved inorganic carbon (DIC) concentrations in the upper water column continue to decrease even after complete depletion of dissolved inorganic nitrogen (DIN). To explain this observation, a new external supply of nitrogen is required without a concomitant supply of inorganic carbon. The primary proposed candidate process is N 2 -fixation. In order to address this question in the eastern Gotland Sea, a biogeochemical model containing nine state variables including diatoms, flagellates, and nitrogen fixing cyanobacteria, was coupled to a 1D physical model. The results from the winter period until the onset of the spring bloom of 1997 gave reasonable surface water values for partial pressure of CO 2 ( p CO 2 ) compared with measurements of the p CO 2 . However, the model failed to simulate the observed p CO 2 drawdown for the period from the end of the spring bloom until late summer. Even after introducing a seasonal dissolved organic carbon (DOC) excess production and varying different process parameterization the simulated p CO 2 values did not improve. Only the shift from a sharp to a moderate temperature dependency in addition to an increase in the C:P ratio of the nitrogen fixing cyanobacteria made it possible for the model to match the p CO 2 observations. The resulting total nitrogen fixation (167 mmol m -2 a -1 ) exceeds previous measurement-based estimates but is in good agreement with recent rate measurement based estimates.
The role of N 2 -fixation to simulate the p CO 2 observations from the Baltic Sea
A. Leinweber,T. Neumann,B. Schneider
Published 2005 in Biogeosciences Discussions
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- Publication year
2005
- Venue
Biogeosciences Discussions
- Publication date
2005-05-26
- Fields of study
Chemistry, Environmental Science
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