Carbon and Nutrient Dynamics and Fluxes in the Northwest European Continental Shelf Sea

Matthew Paul Humphreys1, Mark M Moore1, Eric P Achterberg2, Alex Griffiths3, Angelina Smilenova4, Mohammed Z H Chowdhury4, Caroline Kivimae5, Susan Elizabeth Hartman6, Joanne Hopkins7 and Malcolm S Woodward8, (1)University of Southampton, Ocean and Earth Science, Southampton, United Kingdom, (2)University of Southampton, Southampton, SO14, United Kingdom, (3)Imperial College London, United Kingdom, (4)University of Southampton, Southampton, United Kingdom, (5)National Oceanography Centre, Southampton, United Kingdom, (6)National Oceanography Center Southampton, Southampton, United Kingdom, (7)National Oceanography Centre, Liverpool, United Kingdom, (8)Plymouth Marine Laboratory, Plymouth, PL1, United Kingdom
Abstract:
Despite covering only about 5 % of the Earth’s ocean surface area, shallow marginal seas support 15-20 % of global primary productivity, and are the key interface between the land and the open ocean. They are therefore of critical importance to marine biogeochemical cycles, and may have a significant role in ocean uptake and storage of anthropogenic carbon dioxide (CO2). However, their behaviour is significantly more complex than that of the open ocean, because of the greater heterogeneity of the underlying physical, chemical and biological processes acting upon them. Detailed case-studies of individual regions are therefore essential in order to accurately evaluate their net global influence. The Northwest European continental shelf, in particular the Celtic Sea, was the target of extensive hydrographic sampling from March 2014 to September 2015, as part of the UK Shelf Seas Biogeochemistry research programme (UK-SSB). Here, we use the UK-SSB carbonate chemistry and macronutrient measurements to describe the seasonal biogeochemical cycle in the Celtic Sea. The 100-200 m deep water column proceeds from vertically well mixed in winter to a strongly stratified two-layer structure over spring-summer. The associated seasonal cycle in near-surface biological activity removes dissolved inorganic carbon (DIC) and nutrients, some of which are then exported into the deeper layer. Calculating total inventories of the biogeochemical variables throughout the seasonal cycle, we determine seasonal net CO2 uptake and investigate whether non-Redfieldian macronutrient uptake and remineralisation processes occur. Combining these results with estimated water exchange across the shelf edge further allows us to quantify the strength of the ‘shelf pump’ sink for atmospheric (and anthropogenic) CO2.