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Lower Seine river and estuary (France) carbon and oxygen budgets during low flow
Garnier, J.; Servais, P.; Billen, G.; Akopian, M.; Brion, N. (2001). Lower Seine river and estuary (France) carbon and oxygen budgets during low flow. Estuaries 24(6B): 964-976
In: Estuaries. The Estuarine Research Federation, Chesapeake Biological Laboratory: Columbia, S.C., etc.,. ISSN 0160-8347; e-ISSN 1559-2758, more
Peer reviewed article  

Available in  Authors 

Keywords
    ANE, France, Seine Estuary [Marine Regions]
    Marine/Coastal; Brackish water

Authors  Top 
  • Akopian, M.
  • Brion, N., more

Abstract
    Ecological processes driving the oxygen budget were investigated in the downstream part of the Seine River and its estuary. Phytoplankton and bacterioplankton production were measured along longitudinal profiles (11 to 17 stations) in a range of low discharges from 300 m³ s -1 in 1993 and 1995 to 140 m³ s -1 in 1996. Values representative of the water column were based on investigations carried out during two tidal cycles. Net primary production was invariably greatest in the freshwater estuary, from Poses to Rouen (from 500 to 1,000 µg C l -1 d -1 between PK 202 and 240) and decreased sharply downstream (from 10 to 25 µg C l -1 d -1 between PK 250 and 310). This decrease was mainly due to the deterioration of the light conditions with the increase in depth and suspended matter concentrations. Heterotrophic activity was maximum in the reach where primary production declined. Judging by the production:respiration ratio (P:R), the system appeared clearly heterotrophic in the Seine River immediately downstream of the Paris region due to high allochthonous organic pollution by the incompletely treated Parisian effluents and in the part of the estuary characterized by intense degradation of autochthonous material. Because the effluents are not treated by a nitrification step, the oxygen consumption due to nitrification was much higher than expected from the P:R ratio. Oxidation of ammonium represented an oxygen consumption of between 1 and 14 g O2 m -2 d -1, almost equalling the sum of heterotrophic respirations that were barely balanced by photosynthesis. The reaeration flux at the water-atmosphere interface was deduced from the calculations and a reaeration coefficient was estimated.

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