Distinguishing physical and biological controls on the carbon dynamics
in a high-Arctic outlet strait
Abstract
The water mass assembly of Nares Strait is variable, owing to
fluctuating wind forcings over the Arctic Basins, and irregular
northward flows from the West Greenland Current (WGC) in Baffin Bay.
Here we characterize the physico-chemical properties of the water masses
entering Nares Strait in August 2014, and we employ an extended optimum
multi-parameter (OMP) water mass analysis to estimate the mixing
fractions of predefined source water masses, and to distinguish the role
of physical and biological processes in governing the distribution of
dissolved inorganic carbon (DIC) in Nares Strait. We show the first
documented evidence of Siberian shelf waters in Nares Strait, along with
a diluted upper halocline layer of partial Pacific-origin. These
mixed-origin water masses appear to play an important role in driving a
modest phytoplankton bloom in Kane Basin, leading to decreased surface
pCO2 concentrations in Nares Strait. Although
inorganic nitrogen was already limited in the surface mixed layer in
northern Nares Strait, the unique properties of mixed Atlantic-Pacific
water facilitated upwelling and nutrient supply to the surface. These
observations suggest that the positioning of the Transpolar Drift, and
hence the balance of Atlantic and Pacific water delivered to Nares
Strait, is likely to play an important role in regional biological
productivity and carbon uptake from the atmosphere. We also observed
water masses from the WGC transported as far north as Kane Basin,
contributing to relatively high pCO2 and low pH
in the intermediate and deep water column of southern Nares Strait and
northern Baffin Bay.