Controls on subsurface water pH and carbonate saturation state along the North American Atlantic Ocean margins
ID:861 Oral (invited)

2025-01-14 10:10 (China Standard Time)

Session:Session 9-Global Ocean Changes: Regional Processes and Ecological Impacts

Abstract
pH is a key index for ocean biogeochemical and acidification studies. However, the spatial patterns and drivers of pH in various coastal regions remain insufficiently understood. In this study, we present summertime distributions of the subsurface water pH and the processes controlling them along the North American Atlantic Ocean Margins, including the northern Gulf of Mexico (GoMx), South Atlantic Bight (SAB), Mid-Atlantic Bight (MAB), and Gulf of Maine (GoMe). Our findings reveal a continuous low pH band on the slope, associated with the oxygen minimum and CO2 maximum zones, along the entire North American Atlantic coast, ranging from the bottom layer (600-1000 m) in the GoMx and SAB to the middle layer (300-500 m) off the MAB and GoMe. We also observed unique low pH features on various shelves: a low pH with relatively high aragonite saturation state (Warag) associated with hypoxia in the northern GoMx, an onshore upwelling of the low pH slope water in the SAB, a seasonal low pH feature on the MAB shelf bottom associated with the Cold Pool water, and an inflow of low pH slope water into the bottom of the GoMe’s bottom layer.
Our analysis highlights that net biological respiration predominately drives the sub-regional subsurface pH distributions on shelf waters. However, on a larger latitudinal scale, the initial wintertime CO2—higher in cold northern waters—plays a significant role in shaping the subsequent warm-season pH and Warag. In particular, we discuss this mechanism in controlling pH and Warag in the Cold Pool water in the MAB and, further north, in bottom waters in the GoMe and beyond. In these waters, while oxygen is relatively high and pH is only moderately low, Warag is particularly low, in stark contrast to the very low pH and moderately high Warag waters found in the northern GoMx hypoxia zone. Our analysis provides new insights and lays a foundation for interpreting future pH changes in response to processes such as water masses shifting, ocean warming, and anthropogenic carbon uptake in coastal oceans.
Keywords
coastal ocean pH, carbonate saturation state, ocean acidification
Speaker
Wei-Jun Cai
Associate Dean, University of Delaware

Author
Wei-Jun CAI University of Delaware
Xinyu LI University of Delaware
Bo DONG University of Delaware
Zhentao SUN University of Delaware
Qian LI Second Institute Of Oceanography, MNR