Optical insight into riverine influences on dissolved and particulate
organic carbon in a coastal Arctic lagoon system
Abstract
Optical properties of seawater can provide valuable insight into
distributions of dissolved organic carbon (DOC) and particulate organic
carbon (POC), provided that their interrelationships are well
understood. We examined relationships between DOC and POC, and
absorption, backscatter, and fluorescence in a river-fed lagoon system
in the coastal Alaskan Arctic during late summer of 2018 and 2019. Over
both years analytically measured DOC levels were inversely correlated
with salinity (r2 = 0.97) and DOC was positively correlated with
dissolved organic material fluorescence (fDOM; r2 = 0.67). However, DOC
showed strong correlation with the absorption coefficient at 440 nm
(ag(440)) only in 2018 (r2 = 0.95 versus r2 = 0.00056 in 2019). Vertical
structure of fDOM in our study area corresponded with density profiles
more strongly in 2018 than in 2019, but higher levels of fDOM, ag(440),
and backscatter near the bottom in 2019 suggest prior wind-driven mixing
or bottom resuspension events. In 2018 and 2019, the spectral slope of
the absorption coefficient between 412 and 550 nm was strongly
correlated with DOC concentration (r2 = 0.70), and spectral
backscattering coefficients were well correlated with POC concentration
(r2 = 0.90, 0.71, and 0.59 for 470, 532, and 660 nm respectively). These
interannual patterns in the distribution of DOC and POC and their
respective relationships with optical proxies likely reflect regional
climatological factors such as precipitation over the adjacent
watersheds, wind patterns, and residual sea ice in late summer.