Award Abstract # 0726989
Estuarine air-Sea CO2 Fluxes: Evaluating the Impact of Climatological Drivers Spanning Multiple Temporal Scales using Ships-of-Opportunity and Remote Sensing

NSF Org: OCE
Division Of Ocean Sciences
Recipient: UNIVERSITY OF NORTH CAROLINA AT CHAPEL HILL
Initial Amendment Date: September 17, 2007
Latest Amendment Date: September 17, 2007
Award Number: 0726989
Award Instrument: Standard Grant
Program Manager: Donald L. Rice
OCE
 Division Of Ocean Sciences
GEO
 Directorate for Geosciences
Start Date: April 1, 2008
End Date: March 31, 2012 (Estimated)
Total Intended Award Amount: $523,662.00
Total Awarded Amount to Date: $523,662.00
Funds Obligated to Date: FY 2007 = $523,662.00
History of Investigator:
  • Hans Paerl (Principal Investigator)
    hans_paerl@unc.edu
  • Burke Hales (Co-Principal Investigator)
  • Michael Wetz (Co-Principal Investigator)
Recipient Sponsored Research Office: University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
104 AIRPORT DR STE 2200
CHAPEL HILL
NC  US  27599-5023
(919)966-3411
Sponsor Congressional District: 04
Primary Place of Performance: University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
104 AIRPORT DR STE 2200
CHAPEL HILL
NC  US  27599-5023
Primary Place of Performance
Congressional District:
04
Unique Entity Identifier (UEI): D3LHU66KBLD5
Parent UEI: D3LHU66KBLD5
NSF Program(s): Chemical Oceanography,
OCE SPECIAL PROGRAMS,
Integrat & Collab Ed & Rsearch
Primary Program Source: app-0107 
Program Reference Code(s): 1389, 9189, EGCH
Program Element Code(s): 167000, 541800, 769900
Award Agency Code: 4900
Fund Agency Code: 4900
Assistance Listing Number(s): 47.050

ABSTRACT


OCE-0726989

Estuaries are among the most productive and dynamic aquatic ecosystems on Earth. Because they cover extensive areas of coastlines worldwide, estuaries play key roles in regional and global C cycling. However, estuarine air-sea CO2 fluxes, which represent the sum of the major metabolic processes in the estuary, are strongly influenced by intra- and interannual variability in climatological/hydrological forcings such as hurricane events. Because of limited spatial-temporal sampling resolution, previous studies have not been able to determine the impact of these different scales of variability on estuarine air-sea CO2 fluxes. In this research, an interdisciplinary team from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and Oregon State University has been assembled to quantify air-sea CO2 fluxes in the nation's 2nd largest estuary, and to evaluate and quantify environmental controls upon those fluxes. North Carolina's Neuse River-Pamlico Sound estuarine system (NRE-PS) is downstream of rapidly expanding urban and agricultural activities and has had five category 2 or higher hurricanes make landfall in its watershed in the past decade. Additionally, the system's microtidal nature and long water residence time (>2 mo) make it ideal for a study on estuarine air-sea CO2 fluxes. The NRE-PS has the added advantage of ongoing, spatially and temporally intense, long-term observational programs that will serve as sources of complementary environmental data; the Neuse River Modeling and Monitoring Program (ModMon), and a ferry-based continuous monitoring program (FerryMon).

Robust evaluation of NRE-PS air-sea CO2 fluxes will be accomplished by outfitting a small research boat and three N.C. Dept. of Transportation ferries with CO2 partial pressure (pCO2) sensors, thereby allowing for year-round, high spatial-temporal resolution characterization of surface p CO2. Remotely-sensed (every 3 d) surface biogeochemical data, generated by an ongoing collaborative project with researchers at the U.S. EPA, will also be available. In addition to addressing air-sea fluxes, the data from this project will enhance an existing mechanistic biogeochemical estuarine model that is used to investigate linkages between nutrient and hydrologic forcings, and system wide C and O2 dynamics. This effort, in conjunction with synthesis of data collected during the other parallel monitoring programs, will be invaluable for assessing the ecosystem response to extreme climatological events such as droughts and a predicted rise in Atlantic hurricane activity.

In terms of broader impacts, the NRE-PS exemplifies the classic symptoms of human and climatological perturbations impacting the coastal margin and so this project's results have the potential to apply to productive estuarine ecosystems worldwide. This project will also provide diverse educational opportunities for post-doctoral researchers, graduate students, and undergraduate students, who will be actively engaged in field and laboratory components and encouraged to develop independent research projects. The NSF-supported Summer Pre-graduate Research Experience Program (SPGRE) at UNC-CH and regional universities educating predominantly under-represented and minority groups will provide students for summer internships. Finally, high school students and teachers will be employed as interns during the summer field season, giving them a range of newfound experiences and knowledge to bring back to the classroom.

PUBLICATIONS PRODUCED AS A RESULT OF THIS RESEARCH

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Lunetta, R.S, J.F. Knight, H.W. Paerl, J.J. Streicher, B.L. Peierls, T, Gallo, J.G. Lyon, T.H. Mace and C.P. Buzzelli. "Measurement of water color using AVIRIS Imagery to assess the potential for an operational monitoring capability in the Pamlico Sound Estuary, USA." International Journal of Remote Sensing , v.30 , 2009 3291
Lunetta, R.S, J.F. Knight, H.W. Paerl, J.J. Streicher, B.L. Peierls, T, Gallo, J.G. Lyon, T.H. Mace and C.P. Buzzelli. "Measurement of water color using AVIRIS Imagery to assess the potential for an operational monitoring capability in the Pamlico Sound Estuary, USA." International Journal of Remote Sensing , v.30 , 2009 , p.329
Paerl, H.W. and B.L. Peierls "Ecological Responses of the Neuse River?Pamlico Sound Estuarine Continuum to a Period of Elevated Hurricane Activity: Impacts of Individual Storms and Longer Term Trends." Trans. American Fisheries Society , v.64 , 2008 , p.101
Paerl, H.W. and B.L. Peierls "Ecological Responses of the Neuse River?Pamlico Sound Estuarine Continuum to a Period of Elevated Hurricane Activity: Impacts of Individual Storms and Longer Term Trends." Trans. American Fisheries Society , v.64 , 2008 , p.101
Paerl, H.W. and J.T Scott "Throwing fuel on the fire: Synergistic effects of excessive nitrogen inputs and global warming on harmful algal blooms." Environmental Science & Technology , v.44 , 2010 , p.7756
Paerl, H.W., K.L. Rossignol, N.S. Hall, B.L. Peierls and M.S. Wetz. "Phytoplankton Community Indicators of Short and Long-Term Ecological Change in the Anthropogenically and Climatically Impacted Neuse River Estuary, North Carolina, USA." Estuaries and Coasts , v.33 , 2010 , p.485
Paerl, H.W. K.L. Rossignol, N.S. Hall, R. Guajardo, A.R. Joyner, B.L. Peierls, and J. Ramus. "FerryMon: Ferry-based monitoring and assessment of human and climatically-driven environmental change in the Pamlico Sound System, North Carolina, USA." Environmental Science & Technology , v.43 , 2009 , p.7609
Paerl, H.W. K.L. Rossignol, N.S. Hall, R. Guajardo, A.R. Joyner, B.L. Peierls, and J. Ramus. "FerryMon: Ferry-based monitoring and assessment of human and climatically-driven environmental change in the Pamlico Sound System, North Carolina, USA." Environmental Science & Technology , v.43 , 2009 , p.7609
Sokoletsky, L.G., R.S. Lunetta, M.S. Wetz, and H.W. Paerl. "MERIS Retrieval of Water Quality Components in the Turbid Albemarle-Pamlico Sound Estuary, USA." Remote Sensing , v.3 , 2011 , p.684
Wetz, M.S, E. Hutchinson, R.S. Lunetta, H.W. Paerl and J.C. Taylor. "Severe droughts reduce estuarine planktonic productivity with cascading effects on higher trophic levels." Limnology and Oceanography , v.56 , 2011 , p.627

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