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Journal article

Enhanced ocean carbon storage from anaerobic alkalinity generation in coastal sediments

The coastal ocean is a crucial link between land, the open ocean and the atmosphere. The shallowness of the water column permits close interactions between the sedimentary, aquatic and atmospheric compartments, which otherwise are decoupled at long time scales (≅ 1000 yr) in the open oceans.

Despite the prominent role of the coastal oceans in absorbing atmospheric CO<sub>2</sub> and transferring it into the deep oceans via the continental shelf pump, the underlying mechanisms remain only partly understood. Evaluating observations from the North Sea, a NW European shelf sea, we provide evidence that anaerobic degradation of organic matter, fuelled from land and ocean, generates total alkalinity (A<sub>T</sub>) and increases the CO<sub>2</sub> buffer capacity of seawater.

At both the basin wide and annual scales anaerobic A<sub>T</sub> generation in the North Sea's tidal mud flat area irreversibly facilitates 7–10%, or taking into consideration benthic denitrification in the North Sea, 20–25% of the North Sea's overall CO<sub>2</sub> uptake.

At the global scale, anaerobic A<sub>T</sub> generation could be accountable for as much as 60% of the uptake of CO<sub>2</sub> in shelf and marginal seas, making this process, the anaerobic pump, a key player in the biological carbon pump. Under future high CO<sub>2</sub> conditions oceanic CO<sub>2</sub> storage via the anaerobic pump may even gain further relevance because of stimulated ocean productivity.

Language: English
Publisher: Copernicus Publications
Year: 2009
Pages: 267-274
ISSN: 17264189 and 17264170
Types: Journal article
DOI: 10.5194/bg-6-267-2009

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