A lattice-automaton bioturbation simulator with coupled physics, chemistry, and biology in marine sediments (eLABS v0.2)
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Published:2019-10-24
Issue:10
Volume:12
Page:4469-4496
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ISSN:1991-9603
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Container-title:Geoscientific Model Development
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language:en
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Short-container-title:Geosci. Model Dev.
Author:
Kanzaki Yoshiki,Boudreau Bernard P.,Kirtland Turner Sandra,Ridgwell Andy
Abstract
Abstract. Seawater–sediment interaction is a crucial factor in
carbon and nutrient cycling on a wide range of spatial and temporal scales.
This interaction is mediated not just through geochemistry but also via
biology. Infauna vigorously mix sediment particles, enhance
porewater–seawater exchange, and consequently, facilitate chemical
reactions. In turn, the ecology and activity of benthic fauna are impacted
by their environment, amplifying the sensitivity of seawater–sediment
interaction to environmental change. However, numerical representation of
the bioturbation of sediment has often been treated simply as an enhanced
diffusion of solutes and solids. Whilst reasonably successful in
representing the mixing of bulk and predominantly oxic marine sediments, the
diffusional approach to bioturbation is limited by a lack of environmental
sensitivity. To better capture the mechanics and effects of sediment
bioturbation, we extend a published bioturbation model (Lattice-Automaton Bioturbation Simulator; LABS) by
adopting a novel method to simulate realistic infaunal behavior that drives
sediment mixing. In this new model (extended LABS – eLABS), simulated benthic organism
action is combined with a deterministic calculation of water flow and oxygen
and organic matter concentration fields to better reflect the
physicochemical evolution of sediment in response to bioturbation. The
predicted burrow geometry and mixing intensity thus attain a dependence on
physicochemical sedimentary conditions. This interplay between biology,
chemistry, and physics is important to mechanistically explain empirical
observations of bioturbation and to account for the impact of environmental
changes. As an illustrative example, we show how higher organic rain can
drive more intense sediment mixing by “luring” benthic organisms deeper into
sediments, while lower ambient dissolved oxygen restricts the oxic habitat
depth and hence tends to reduce bulk mixing rates. Our model, with its
oxygen and food availability controls, is a new tool to interpret the trace
fossil record, e.g., burrows, as well as to explore biological engineering
of past marine environments.
Publisher
Copernicus GmbH
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