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Benthic community respiration in relation to sedimentation of phytoplankton in the Øresund
Kanneworff, E.; Christensen, H. (1986). Benthic community respiration in relation to sedimentation of phytoplankton in the Øresund, in: Muus, K. (Ed.) Proceedings of the 20th European Marine Biology Symposium: Nutrient Cycling. Processes in Marine Sediments, Hirtshals, Denmark, 9-13 September 1985. Ophelia: International Journal of Marine Biology, 26: pp. 269-284
In: Muus, K. (Ed.) (1986). Proceedings of the 20th European Marine Biology Symposium: Nutrient Cycling. Processes in Marine Sediments, Hirtshals, Denmark, 9-13 September 1985. Ophelia: International Journal of Marine Biology, 26. Ophelia Publications: Helsingør. ISBN 87-981066-4-3. 477 pp., more
In: Ophelia: International Journal of Marine Biology. Ophelia Publications: Helsingør. ISSN 0078-5326, more
Peer reviewed article  

Available in  Authors 
Document type: Conference paper

Keyword
    Marine/Coastal

Authors  Top 
  • Kanneworff, E.
  • Christensen, H.

Abstract
    Oxygen uptake was measured in the laboratory on sediment cores taken on 23 occasions with the Haps sampler (135 cm²) from a depth of 27 m in the middle of the Helsingor-Halsingborg-Hven basin in the Øresund. The cores were incubated at temperature and salinity conditions of the sampling locality. Sedimentation of phytoplankton during the spring bloom (April) had no immediate effect on total benthic community respiration. Most of the input was stored and mineralized during summer and autumn. High temperature (10°C) was a prerequisite for a high mineralization rate. Oxygen consumption of macrofauna was calculated from biomass, which remained almost constant during the year. In spring macrofauna accounted for 40% and in autumn for 30% of total benthic community respiration, which was approximately 100 l O2/m²/year. This was equivalent to 44 g of organic carbon, of which 40 and 60% respectively were consumed during first and second half of the year. Feeding and growth of macrofauna were high during spring and bioturbation instantaneously dispersed spring-bloom plant material homogeneously in the sediment. The result was that activity of macroinvertebrates lasted a short time and was low during summer and autumn when sediment consumed oxygen at a high fate primarily by bacterial respiration. Macrofaunal activity seemed not to be limited by low temperatures (3-4°C) in spring.

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