Abstract
As coastal areas become more vulnerable to climatic impacts, the need
for understanding estuarine carbon budgets with sufficient
spatiotemporal resolution arises. Under various hydrologic extremes
ranging from drought to hurricane-induced flooding, a mass balance model
has been constructed for carbon fluxes and their variabilities in four
estuaries along the northwestern Gulf of Mexico (nwGOM) coast over a
four-year period (2014 – 2018). Loading of total organic carbon (TOC)
and dissolved inorganic carbon (DIC) to estuaries include riverine
discharge and lateral exchange from tidal wetland. The lateral exchanges
of TOC and DIC reach 4.5 ± 5.7 and 8.9 ± 1.4 mol·C·m-2·yr-1, accounting
for 86.5% and 62.7% of total TOC and DIC inputs into these estuaries,
respectively. A relatively high regional CO2 efflux (4.0 ± 0.7
mol·C·m-2·yr-1) has been found, which is two times of the average value
in North American coastal estuaries based on a previous study.
Meanwhile, oceanic export is the major pathway for TOC (5.6 ± 1.7
mol·C·m-2·yr-1, 81.2% of total) and DIC (9.9 ± 2.9 mol·C·m-2·yr-1,
69.7% of total) loss. Yet uncertainties remain due to a varying extent
of remineralization coastwide. In addition, the carbon budget exhibits
high variability in response to the hydrologic changes. For example,
storm or hurricane induced flooding can elevate CO2 efflux by 2 – 10
times in short periods of time. Flood following a drought state also
increases lateral TOC exchange (from -3.5 ± 4.7 to 67.8 ± 17.6
mmol·C·m-2·d-1) but decreases lateral DIC exchange (from 28.9 ± 3.5 to
-7.1 ± 7.6 mmol·C·m-2·d-1). The large variability of carbon budgets
highlights the importance of high-resolution spatiotemporal coverage
under different hydrologic conditions, as well as the significance of
carbon contribution from tidal wetland on coastal carbon cycling.