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1.
Sci Total Environ ; 942: 173717, 2024 Sep 10.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38851331

ABSTRACT

The Finnish Archipelago Sea (AS) has long been subject to intensive anthropogenic phosphorus (P) loading. The area suffers from seasonal hypoxia and cyanobacterial blooms despite reductions in nutrient discharge from the catchment and point sources. Internal loading may even dominate the P budget. Previous estimates of internal P loading have limitations (e.g., in spatial coverage and infrequent measurements). We present the first area-wide estimates of the magnitude of internal P loading based on the long-term release of P stored in the sediments. Modelling the internal P loading in the AS is challenging due to the complexity of biogeochemical processes in the sediment-water interface, as well as the heterogenic topography of the seafloor. Instead, we calculated estimates of internal P loading based on data from previous studies on sequential chemical extraction of sediment P, sediment physical characteristics (e.g., organic content, location of muddy seabed substrates), and near-bottom oxygen (O2) conditions. The estimates in three scenarios of contrasting O2 conditions were based on potentially mobile P pools in the sediments, recycled from sediment to water (i.e., loosely-bound or exchangeable P, P bound to reducible iron oxy(hydr)oxides, and labile organic P). The potentially mobile P pools were determined by chemical extraction methods (modified from Psenner et al., 1984 and Ruttenberg, 1992). The internal P loading under presumable O2 conditions was estimated to be fivefold that of waterborne P input to the AS; comparable to previous estimates for hypoxic areas in the Baltic Sea. Our estimates revealed wide spatial variability in the internal P loading, depending on O2 conditions and seabed sediment substrate. The site-specific P release estimates are included in a water quality model used by regional authorities, which increases the model's reliability for estimating the impact of human activities on the water quality across the AS.

2.
Mar Pollut Bull ; 108(1-2): 77-86, 2016 Jul 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27184132

ABSTRACT

In coastal archipelago areas of the northern Baltic Sea, significantly higher phosphate concentrations (6.0±4.5µmol/l, mean±SD) were measured in water samples close to the sediment surface compared with those from 1m above the seafloor (1.6±2.0µmol/l). The results indicated notable phosphate release from sediments under the bottom water oxygen concentrations of up to 250µmol/l, especially in areas that had experienced recent temporal fluctuation between oxic and hypoxic/anoxic conditions. No single factor alone was found to control the elevated PO4-P concentrations in the near-bottom water. In addition to the oxygen in the water, the contents of potentially mobile phosphorus fractions, grain-size, the organic content at the sediment surface, and the water depth were all important factors controlling the internal loading of phosphorus. The complexity of this process needs to be accounted for in assessments of the internal loading of phosphorus and in potential mitigation plans.


Subject(s)
Geologic Sediments , Phosphorus , Water Pollutants, Chemical , Atlantic Ocean , Oxygen , Seawater
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