Laboratory Observation of the Buffering Effect of Aragonite Dissolution at the Seafloor

Publication date

2024-02

Authors

van de Mortel, H.
Delaigue, L.
Humphreys, M.P.
Middelburg, JackORCID 0000-0003-3601-9072ISNI 0000000050735946
Ossebaar, S.
Bakker, K.
Trabucho Alexandre, JoãoORCID 0000-0003-1997-027XISNI 0000000395814201
van Leeuwen ‐ Tolboom, A.W.E.ISNI 0000000527734589
Wolthers, MarietteORCID 0000-0003-3908-5622ISNI 0000000074482066
Sulpis, O.ISNI 0000000492926440

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Article
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Abstract

Carbon dioxide entering and acidifying the ocean can be neutralized by the dissolution of calcium carbonate, which is mainly found in two mineral forms. Calcite is the more stable form and is often found in deep-sea sediments, whilst aragonite is more soluble and therefore rarely preserved. Recent research shows aragonite may account for a much larger portion of marine calcium carbonate export to the ocean interior via the biological pump than previously thought, and that aragonite does reach the deep sea and seafloor despite rarely being buried. If aragonite is present and dissolving at the seafloor it will raise local pH and calcium and carbonate concentrations, potentially enough to inhibit calcite dissolution, representing a deep-sea, carbonate version of galvanization. Here, we test this hypothesis by simulating aragonite dissolution at the sediment-water interface in the laboratory and measuring its effects on pH using microsensors. We show that the addition of aragonite to calcite sediment, overlain by seawater undersaturated with respect to both minerals, results in an unchanged alkalinity flux out of the dissolving sediment, suggesting a decrease the net dissolution rate of calcite. In combination with a diagenetic model, we show that aragonite dissolution can suppress calcite dissolution in the top millimeters of the seabed, locally leading to calcite precipitation within 1 day. Future research efforts should quantify this galvanization effect in situ, as this process may represent an important component of the marine carbon cycle, assigning a key role to aragonite producers in controlling ocean alkalinity and preserving climatic archives.

Keywords

carbon cycling, marine geochemistry, Water Science and Technology, Forestry, Aquatic Science, Soil Science, Palaeontology, Ecology, Atmospheric Science

Citation

van de Mortel, H, Delaigue, L, Humphreys, M P, Middelburg, J J, Ossebaar, S, Bakker, K, Trabucho Alexandre, J P, van Leeuwen ‐ Tolboom, A W E, Wolthers, M & Sulpis, O 2024, 'Laboratory Observation of the Buffering Effect of Aragonite Dissolution at the Seafloor', Journal of Geophysical Research: Biogeosciences, vol. 129, no. 2, e2023JG007581. https://doi.org/10.1029/2023JG007581