Technical note: Continuous fluorescence-based monitoring of seawater pH in situ
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Published:2018-07-16
Issue:13
Volume:15
Page:4291-4299
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ISSN:1726-4189
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Container-title:Biogeosciences
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language:en
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Short-container-title:Biogeosciences
Author:
Runcie John W.ORCID, Krause Christian, Torres Gabarda Sergio A., Byrne Maria
Abstract
Abstract. Electrical conductivity (salinity), temperature and
fluorescence-based measurements of pH were employed to examine diel
fluctuations in seawater carbonate chemistry of surface waters in Sydney
Harbour over two multiple-day periods. A proof-of-concept device employing
the fluorescence-based technique provided a useful time series for pH.
Alkalinity with pH and temperature were used to calculate the degree of
calcite and aragonite saturation (ΩCa and
ΩAr, respectively). Alkalinity was determined from a
published alkalinity–salinity relationship. The fluctuations observed in pH
over intervals of minutes to hours could be distinguished from background
noise. While the stated phase angle resolution of the lifetime fluorometer
translated into pH units was ±0.0028 pH units, the repeatability standard
deviation of calculated pH was 0.007 to 0.009. Diel variability in pH,
ΩAr and ΩCa showed a clear pattern that
appeared to correlate with both salinity and temperature. Drift due to
photodegradation of the fluorophore was minimized by reducing exposure to
ambient light. The ΩCa and ΩAr fluctuated
on a daily cycle. The net result of changes in pH, salinity and temperature
combined to influence seawater carbonate chemistry. The fluorescence-based pH
monitoring technique is simple, provides good resolution and is unaffected by
moving parts or leaching of solutions over time. The use of optics is
pressure insensitive, making this approach to ocean acidification monitoring
well suited to deepwater applications.
Publisher
Copernicus GmbH
Subject
Earth-Surface Processes,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics
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