Long Matthew H, Sutherland Kevin, Wankel Scott D, Burdige David J, Zimmerman Richard C
Marine Chemistry and Geochemistry Department Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution Woods Hole Massachusetts.
Department of Earth, Atmospheric and Planetary Sciences Massachusetts Institute of Technology Cambridge Massachusetts.
Limnol Oceanogr. 2020 Feb;65(2):314-324. doi: 10.1002/lno.11299. Epub 2019 Aug 8.
Gas ebullition from aquatic systems to the atmosphere represents a potentially important fraction of primary production that goes unquantified by measurements of dissolved gas concentrations. Although gas ebullition from photosynthetic surfaces has often been observed, it is rarely quantified. The resulting underestimation of photosynthetic activity may significantly bias the determination of ecosystem trophic status and estimated rates of biogeochemical cycling from in situ measures of dissolved oxygen. Here, we quantified gas ebullition rates in meadows in Virginia, U.S.A. using simple funnel traps and analyzed the oxygen concentration and isotopic composition of the captured gas. Maximum hourly rates of oxygen ebullition (3.0 mmol oxygen m h) were observed during the coincidence of high irradiance and low tides, particularly in the afternoon when oxygen and temperature maxima occurred. The daily ebullition fluxes (up to 11 mmol oxygen m d) were roughly equivalent to net primary production rates determined from dissolved oxygen measurements indicating that bubble ebullition can represent a major component of primary production that is not commonly included in ecosystem-scale estimates. Oxygen content comprised 20-40% of the captured bubble gas volume and correlated negatively with its δO values, consistent with a predominance of mixing between the higher δO of atmospheric oxygen in equilibrium with seawater and the lower δO of oxygen derived from photosynthesis. Thus, future studies interested in the metabolism of highly productive, shallow water ecosystems, and particularly those measuring in situ oxygen flux, should not ignore the bubble formation and ebullition processes described here.
从水生系统向大气的气体冒泡是初级生产中一个潜在的重要部分,而通过溶解气体浓度测量无法对其进行量化。尽管经常观察到光合表面的气体冒泡现象,但很少对其进行量化。由此导致的对光合活性的低估可能会显著影响从溶解氧原位测量来确定生态系统营养状态和估计生物地球化学循环速率的结果。在这里,我们使用简单的漏斗陷阱对美国弗吉尼亚州草甸中的气体冒泡速率进行了量化,并分析了捕获气体中的氧气浓度和同位素组成。在高光照和低潮同时出现时,尤其是在下午氧气和温度达到最大值时,观察到了氧气冒泡的最大每小时速率(3.0 mmol氧气·m²·h⁻¹)。每日冒泡通量(高达11 mmol氧气·m²·d⁻¹)大致相当于通过溶解氧测量确定的净初级生产速率,这表明气泡冒泡可以代表初级生产的一个主要组成部分,而这在生态系统尺度的估计中通常未被包括。氧气含量占捕获气泡气体体积的20 - 40%,并与其δO值呈负相关,这与平衡海水中较高δO的大气氧与光合作用产生的较低δO的氧之间的混合占主导一致。因此,未来对高产浅水生态系统代谢感兴趣的研究,尤其是那些测量原位氧气通量的研究,不应忽视这里描述的气泡形成和冒泡过程。