Abstract
Abstract. The magnitude and controls of particulate carbon exported from surface waters
and its remineralization at depth are poorly constrained. The Carbon Flux
Explorer (CFE), a Lagrangian float-deployed imaging sediment trap, has been
designed to optically measure the hourly variations of particle flux to
kilometer depths for months to seasons while relaying data in near-real time
to shore via satellite without attending ships. The main optical proxy for
particle load recorded by the CFE, volume attenuance (VA; units of
mATN cm2), while rigorously defined and highly precise, has not been
robustly calibrated in terms of particulate organic carbon (POC), nitrogen
(PN) and phosphorus (PP). In this study, a novel 3-D-printed particle sampler
using cutting edge additive manufacturing was developed and integrated with
the CFE. Two such modified floats (CFE-Cals) were deployed a total of
15 times for 18–24 h periods to gain calibration imagery and samples at
depths near 150 m in four contrasting productivity environments during the
June 2017 California Current Ecosystem Long-Term Ecological Research (LTER)
process study. Regression slopes for VA : POC and VA : PN (units
mATN cm2: mmol; R2, n, p value in parentheses) were
1.01×104 (0.86, 12, < 0.001) and 1.01×105
(0.86, 15, < 0.001), respectively, and were not sensitive to
particle size classes or the contrasting environments encountered. PP was not
well correlated with VA, reflecting the high lability of P relative to C and
N. The volume attenuance flux (VAF) to POC flux calibration is compared to
previous estimates.
Subject
Earth-Surface Processes,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics
Cited by
9 articles.
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