Phosphorus speciation and sedimentary phosphorus release from the Gulf of Mexico sediments: Implication for hypoxia
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
10-5-2015
Abstract
Phosphorus (P) is an important macronutrient that can limit primary productivity in coastal marine ecosystems. This study provides a quantitative determination of abundance and chemical speciation of P and potential anaerobic P-release rates from northern Gulf of Mexico (GOM) sediments. Seven sediment cores were collected from shelf, slope and deep-sea sediments in the northern GOM. A sequential extraction method was used to operationally separate P pools into readily available-P, Fe/Al-P, alkali extractable organic-P, Ca/Mg-P, and residual-P. Ca/Mg-P was the most abundant form of sediment P (79.0±9.4% of TP). Northern GOM sediments were found to release 0.02-4.4mgkg-1d-1 of bioavailable-P under anoxic sediment condition. P-release rate had significant positive correlation (P=0.001) with the Fe/Al-P fraction, indicating this relatively small pool of TP (~0.4-10.2%) is primarily releasing available-P to the water column during hypoxia events. The findings of this study suggest that the internal sedimentary P loading contributes substantial bioavailable-P to the P-limited water column which leads to increased primary production in the northern GOM, creating a positive feedback mechanism for hypoxia. Therefore, the action plan to reduce the GOM hypoxia zone needs to take internal sediment P loading into account when managing for watershed nutrient loading.
Publication Source (Journal or Book title)
Estuarine Coastal and Shelf Science
First Page
77
Last Page
85
Recommended Citation
Adhikari, P., White, J., Maiti, K., & Nguyen, N. (2015). Phosphorus speciation and sedimentary phosphorus release from the Gulf of Mexico sediments: Implication for hypoxia. Estuarine Coastal and Shelf Science, 164, 77-85. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ecss.2015.07.016