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Seasonal and annual fluxes of nutrients and organic matter from large rivers to the Arctic Ocean and surrounding seas
Authors
A Bring
ACIA
+64 more
Alexander V. Zhulidov
AV Zhulidov
AV Zhulidov
BJ Peterson
BJ Peterson
BJ Peterson
Bruce J. Peterson
CA Emmerton
CA Emmerton
CR Tobias
D White
Daniel J. Repeta
E Sakshaug
Ekaterina Bulygina
G Booth
GW Kling
IPCC
J Brown
J Finlay
James W. McClelland
JC Adam
JC Neff
JM Lobbes
JW McClelland
JW McClelland
JW McClelland
JW McClelland
K Aagaard
LC Smith
LR Welp
LW Cooper
LW Cooper
MA Rawlins
MA Walvoord
MC Serreze
MC Serreze
MM Dornblaser
PA Raymond
Peter A. Raymond
RG Striegl
RG Striegl
RGM Spencer
RGM Spencer
RM Holmes
RM Holmes
RM Holmes
RM Holmes
RM Holmes
Robert G. Striegl
Robert Max Holmes
Robin Staples
Sergey A. Zimov
SJ Déry
SJ Déry
Suzanne E. Tank
SW Nixon
T Dittmar
T Ngo-Duc
Tatiana Y. Gurtovaya
Timothy I. Eglinton
Viacheslav V. Gordeev
VV Gordeev
WB Bowden
WM Kemp
Publication date
1 March 2011
Publisher
'Springer Science and Business Media LLC'
Doi
Cite
Abstract
Author Posting. © The Author(s), 2011. This is the author's version of the work. It is posted here by permission of Springer for personal use, not for redistribution. The definitive version was published in Estuaries and Coasts 35 (2012): 369-382, doi:10.1007/s12237-011-9386-6.River inputs of nutrients and organic matter impact the biogeochemistry of arctic estuaries and the Arctic Ocean as a whole, yet there is considerable uncertainty about the magnitude of fluvial fluxes at the pan-arctic scale. Samples from the six largest arctic rivers, with a combined watershed area of 11.3 x 106 km2, have revealed strong seasonal variations in constituent concentrations and fluxes within rivers as well as large differences among the rivers. Specifically, we investigate fluxes of dissolved organic carbon, dissolved organic nitrogen, total dissolved phosphorus, dissolved inorganic nitrogen, nitrate, and silica. This is the first time that seasonal and annual constituent fluxes have been determined using consistent sampling and analytical methods at the pan arctic scale, and consequently provide the best available estimates for constituent flux from land to the Arctic Ocean and surrounding seas. Given the large inputs of river water to the relatively small Arctic Ocean, and the dramatic impacts that climate change is having in the Arctic, it is particularly urgent that we establish the contemporary river fluxes so that we will be able to detect future changes and evaluate the impact of the changes on the biogeochemistry of the receiving coastal and ocean systems.This work was supported by the National Science Foundation through grants OPP-0229302, OPP-0519840, OPP-0732522, and OPP-0732944. Additional support was provided by the U. S. Geological Survey (Yukon River) and the Department of Indian and Northern Affairs (Mackenzie River)
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