An In situ Study of Seasonal Dissolved Organic Carbon and Nutrient Fluxes from a Spartina alterniflora Salt Marsh in North Carolina

Derek John Detweiler and Ai Ning Loh, University of North Carolina Wilmington, Department of Earth and Ocean Sciences, Wilmington, NC, United States
Abstract:
Spartina alterniflora salt marshes are among the most productive and biogeochemically active ecosystems on Earth. While they have been shown to be sources of dissolved organic carbon (DOC) and nutrient export to the coastal ocean via tidal processes, it has not been well quantified experimentally. The purpose of this study was to quantify DOC and nutrient fluxes from a fringing S. alterniflora salt marsh in North Carolina. The experiment was conducted using in situ benthic microcosm chambers filled with seawater during a flooding tide; the chambers were then plugged, and samples were collected during an ebbing tide over the course of 270 minutes while simulating light and dark conditions. Water samples were filtered and analyzed for DOC and nutrient concentrations over time and used to calculate fluxes from vegetated (S. alterniflora) and non-vegetated marsh sediments. Preliminary daily flux calculations show that fluxes from vegetated sediments have a higher magnitude when compared to fluxes from non-vegetated sediments. Daily flux calculations also suggest that vegetated sediments act as a DOC source while non-vegetated sediments act as a DOC sink. Additional flux data for dissolved inorganic and organic nitrogen (DIN, DON) and dissolved inorganic and organic phosphorus (DIP, DOP) as well as marsh sediment characterization will also be presented. Ultimately, these data will provide seasonal daily flux calculations for S. alterniflora salt marshes and insight as to how changing environmental conditions such as wetland modification, wetland destruction, nutrient input, and climate change are affecting coastal biogeochemical cycles.