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Interactions of warming and altered nutrient load timing on the phenology of oxygen dynamics in Chesapeake Bay
Authors:Nicole Basenback  Jeremy M Testa  Chunqi Shen
Institution:1. College of Agriculture and Natural Resources, University of Maryland, College Park, Maryland, USA

Contribution: Conceptualization, Formal analysis, Validation, Visualization, Writing - original draft;2. Chesapeake Biological Laboratory, University of Maryland Center for Environmental Science, Solomons, Maryland, USA;3. College of Environmental Science and Engineering, Suzhou University of Science and Technology, Suzhou, Jiangsu, China

Contribution: Conceptualization, Formal analysis, Methodology, Software, Writing - review & editing

Abstract:The effects of nutrient loading on estuaries are well studied, given the multitude of negative water quality and ecosystem effects that have been attributed to excess nitrogen and phosphorus. A current gap in this knowledge involves the sensitivity of seasonal cycles of estuarine biogeochemical processes to direct (warming) and indirect influences (nutrient load timing) of climate change. We used a coupled hydrologic–biogeochemical model to investigate changes in the phenology of hypoxia and related biogeochemical processes in Chesapeake Bay under three different hydrologic regimes. Shifts to earlier nutrient load timing during idealized simulations reduced the overall annual hypoxic volume, resulting from discernable, but relatively small reductions in phytoplankton biomass and both sediment and water-column respiration. Simulated increases in water temperature caused an increase in spring/early summer hypoxic volume associated with elevated respiration rates, but an associated exhaustion of organic matter in the early summer caused a decrease in late summer/fall hypoxic volume due to lowered respiration. Warming effects on hypoxia were larger than nutrient timing effects in scenarios where warming was restricted to spring and when it was applied to all months of the year. These idealized simulations begin the process of understanding the potential impacts of future climatic changes in the seasonal timing of key biogeochemical processes associated with eutrophication.
Keywords:eutrophication < ECOLOGY  total maximum daily loading (TMDL) < WATER QUALITY  estuaries < GEOGRAPHY  Chesapeake Bay  climate variability/change < CLIMATE  metabolism  biogeochemical model
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