AI Article Synopsis

  • Fresh submarine groundwater discharge (FSGD) significantly transfers water and nutrients from land to sea, particularly in the Arctic, where current knowledge is limited.
  • Despite varying depths of ice-bonded permafrost, summer FSGD flow dynamics in the Beaufort Sea coast of Alaska are similar to those found in warmer regions, with higher fluxes observed in the Arctic.
  • FSGD contributes substantial organic carbon and nitrogen, potentially exceeding river inputs, and its high inorganic carbon content suggests a growing influence on Arctic coastal biogeochemistry as permafrost continues to thaw.

Article Abstract

Fresh submarine groundwater discharge (FSGD) can deliver significant fluxes of water and solutes from land to sea. In the Arctic, which accounts for ∼34% of coastlines globally, direct observations and knowledge of FSGD are scarce. Through integration of observations and process-based models, we found that regardless of ice-bonded permafrost depth at the shore, summer SGD flow dynamics along portions of the Beaufort Sea coast of Alaska are similar to those in lower latitudes. Calculated summer FSGD fluxes in the Arctic are generally higher relative to low latitudes. The FSGD organic carbon and nitrogen fluxes are likely larger than summer riverine input. The FSGD also has very high CO making it a potentially significant source of inorganic carbon. Thus, the biogeochemistry of Arctic coastal waters is potentially influenced by groundwater inputs during summer. These water and solute fluxes will likely increase as coastal permafrost across the Arctic thaws.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11579974PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1029/2024GL109142DOI Listing

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