Factors governing the pH in a heterotrophic, turbid, tidal estuary
Publication date
2009
Authors
Hofmann, A.F.
Meysman, F.J.R.
Soetaert, K.
Middelburg, J.J.
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Document Type
Article
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Abstract
A method to quantify the influence of kinetically modelled biogeochemical processes on the pH of an ecosystem with time variable acid-base dissociation constants is presented and applied to the heterotrophic, turbid Scheldt estuary (SW Netherlands, N Belgium). Nitrification is identified as the main process governing the pH profile of this estuary, while CO2 degassing and advective-dispersive transport "buffer" the effect of nitrification. CO2 degassing accounts for the largest proton turnover per year in the whole estuary. There is a clear inverse correlation between oxygen turnover and proton turnover. The main driver of long-term changes in the mean estuarine pH from 2001 to 2004 is a changing freshwater flow which influences the pH "directly" via [∑CO2] and [TA] and to a significant amount also "indirectly" via [∑NH4+] and the nitrification rates in the estuary.
Keywords
quantification of influences of processes on pH, time variable acid-base dissociation constants, pH, Scheldt estuary