Publication Date:
2022-05-25
Description:
Author Posting. © The Author(s), 2018. This is the author's version of the work. It is posted here under a nonexclusive, irrevocable, paid-up, worldwide license granted to WHOI. It is made available for personal use, not for redistribution. The definitive version was published in Limnology and Oceanography-Methods 16 (2018): 323-338, doi:10.1002/lom3.10247.
Description:
We describe a new, autonomous, incubation-based instrument that is deployed in situ to
determine rates of gross community respiration and net community production in marine and aquatic
ecosystems. During deployments at a coastal pier and in the open ocean, the PHORCYS
(PHOtosynthesis and Respiration Comparison-Yielding System) captured dissolved oxygen fluxes
over hourly timescales that were missed by traditional methods. The instrument uses fluorescence-quenching optodes fitted into separate light and dark chambers; these are opened and closed with
piston-like actuators, allowing the instrument to make multiple, independent rate estimates in the
course of each deployment. Consistent with other studies in which methods purporting to measure
the same metabolic processes have yielded divergent results, respiration rate estimates from the
PHORCYS were systematically higher than those calculated for the same waters using a traditional
two-point Winkler titration technique. However, PHORCYS estimates of gross respiration agreed
generally with separate incubations in bottles fitted with optode sensor spots. An Appendix describes
a new method for estimating uncertainties in metabolic rates calculated from continuous dissolved
oxygen data. Multiple successful, unattended deployments of the PHORCYS represent a small step
toward fully autonomous observations of community metabolism. Yet the persistence of unexplained
disagreements among aquatic metabolic rate estimates — such as those we observed between rates
calculated with the PHORCYS and two existing, widely-accepted bottle-based methods — suggests
that a new community intercalibration effort is warranted to address lingering sources of error in
these critical measurements.
Description:
This research was supported by the U.S.
National Science Foundation (awards OCE-1155438 to B.A.S.V.M., J.R.V., and R.G.K., and OCE-
1059884 to B.A.S.V.M.), the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution through a Cecil and Ida Green
Foundation Innovative Technology Award and an Interdisciplinary Science Award, and a U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) STAR Graduate Fellowship to J.R.C. under Fellowship
Assistance Agreement no. FP-91744301-0.
Keywords:
Respiration
;
Community metabolism
;
Aquatic microbial ecology
;
Autonomous instrumentation
;
Optodes
;
Dissolved oxygen
;
Ocean observing
Repository Name:
Woods Hole Open Access Server
Type:
Preprint
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