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Composition and vertical flux of organic matter in a large Alaskan estuary
Authors:Alexander J Chester  Jerry D Larrance
Institution:1. Pacific Marine Environmental Laboratory Environmental Research Laboratories, NOAA, 7600 Sand Point Way N.E., 98115, Seattle, Washington
Abstract:Observations of the composition and rate of input of organic matter to the sea floor were made at three locations in lower Cook Inlet, Alaska, during five cruises taken in the spring and summer of 1978. Total particulate, plant pigment, carbon, nitrogen, fecal pellet, and phytoplankton cell fluxes, inferred from sediment trap samples, were related to algal biomass and production in overlying waters. A daily average of 7.5% of the phytoplankton biomass was lost to the bottom. Of this loss, 83% was attributable to zooplankton grazing and fecal pellet production. At the three sampling sites, an average of 39 g C m?2 (range of 17–60 g C m?2, was sedimented to the bottom between May and August. This carbon flux represented an average of 12% of the total primary production measured for that time period. Kachemak Bay eastern arm of the inlet, is identified as an extremely productive embayment in which large amounts of organic matter were transferred to the sea floor.
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