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Characterization of Natural and Affected Environments
Treated wastewater changes the export of dissolved inorganic carbon and its isotopic composition and leads to acidification in coastal oceans Xufeng Yang, Liang Xue, Yunxiao Li, Ping Han, Xiangyu Liu, Longjun Zhang, and Wei-Jun Cai Environ. Sci. Technol., Just Accepted Manuscript • DOI: 10.1021/acs.est.8b00273 • Publication Date (Web): 16 Apr 2018 Downloaded from http://pubs.acs.org on April 16, 2018
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Environmental Science & Technology
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Treated wastewater changes the export of dissolved inorganic
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carbon and its isotopic composition and leads to acidification in
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coastal oceans
4
Xufeng Yang,1, 2 Liang Xue,3 Yunxiao Li,1 Ping Han,1 Xiangyu Liu,1 Longjun Zhang,1, 2* Wei-Jun
5
Cai4,*
6 7
1
8
University of China, Qingdao 266100, China.
9
2
Qingdao National Laboratory for Marine Science and Technology, Qingdao 266003, China.
10
3
Centre for Ocean and Climate Research, First Institute of Oceanography, State Oceanic
11
Administration, Qingdao 266061, China.
12
4
13
*Corresponding author. Email:
[email protected],
[email protected] 14
Notes: The authors declare no competing financial interest.
Key Laboratory of Marine Environmental Science and Ecology, Ministry of Education, Ocean
School of Marine Science and Policy, University of Delaware, Newark, Delaware 19716, USA.
15
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ABSTRACT
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Human-induced changes to carbon fluxes across the land-ocean interface can influence the
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global carbon cycle, yet the impacts of rapid urbanization and establishment of wastewater
19
treatment plants (WWTPs) on coastal ocean carbon cycles are poorly known. This is
20
unacceptable as at present ~64% of global municipal wastewater is treated before discharge.
21
Here, we report surface water dissolved inorganic carbon (DIC) and sedimentary organic carbon
22
concentrations and their isotopic compositions in the rapidly urbanized Jiaozhou Bay in northeast
23
China as well as carbonate parameters in effluents of three large WWTPs around the bay. Using
24
DIC, δ13CDIC and total alkalinity (TA) data and a tracer model, we determine the contributions to
25
DIC from wastewater DIC input, net community production, calcium carbonate precipitation and
26
CO2 outgassing. Our study shows that high-DIC and low-pH wastewater effluent represents an
27
important source of DIC and acidification in coastal waters. In contrast to the traditional view of
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anthropogenic organic carbon export and degradation, we suggest that with the increase of
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wastewater discharge and treatment rates, wastewater DIC input may play an increasingly more
30
important role in the coastal ocean carbon cycle.
31 32
ABSTRACT ART
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INTRODUCTION
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Determining the strength of sources and sinks with respect to atmospheric CO2 in coastal oceans
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has attracted considerable attention in recent years.1-3 There are large uncertainties associated
39
with the current estimates of air-sea CO2 fluxes;1-3 these uncertainties result partly from
40
insufficient understanding of the mechanisms controlling CO2 sources and sinks.1,2 In coastal
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areas, a variety of anthropogenic activities are changing the strength and form of terrestrial
42
inputs and thus it has been increasingly challenging to understand the controls of coastal ocean
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CO2 dynamics.4,5 Among these, wastewater discharge derived from rapid urbanization and
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continuing growth of human population at present result in approximately 0.1 Pg yr-1(1 Pg = 1015
45
g) organic carbon export to coastal oceans on the assumption that anthropogenic wastewater is
46
untreated,6,7 which accounts for 22% of riverine organic carbon fluxes.5 However, this
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understanding is out of date6,7 as wastewater treatment plants (WWTPs) are increasingly
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common and transform most of the organic carbon into inorganic carbon before wastewater
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enters the receiving waters. The municipal wastewater treatment rate of the world was already
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more than 64% while that in North America and Western Europe region was even over 77% in 3 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
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2014 according to the data from the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations
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(FAO).8 Increasing discharge of treated wastewater is expected to induce substantial changes in
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the form (organic vs inorganic) of carbon fluxes and in inorganic carbon speciation and isotopic
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composition, and thus these changes will lead to new environmental impacts as this source water
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has very different properties from untreated or inadequately treated wastewater.9,10 Major
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challenges in the study of impacts of treated wastewater on the structure and function of the
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natural carbon cycle mainly rest in separating the signal of wastewater input from various kinds
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of natural processes. Resolving the above issues is necessary to accurately estimate the carbon
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fluxes and to improve our understanding of the carbon cycle in the land-ocean interface.
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Dissolved inorganic carbon (DIC) and total alkalinity (TA) are two important parameters in the
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aquatic system that have been widely used to study the processes controlling seawater CO2
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distribution and air-sea CO2 fluxes as well as coastal ocean acidification.11-15Most previous
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studies focused on isolating the biological effect on DIC using nutrient16 or oxygen variation17,
64
and water mixing effect using a simple linear relationship between DIC and salinity12 or a simple
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two end-member mixing model,13 each of which may yield large uncertainties. However, the
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stable carbon isotopic composition of dissolved inorganic carbon (δ13CDIC) is a powerful tool to
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track the sources and controls of DIC in estuaries and coastal oceans18-22 since carbon isotopic
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fractionation effects differ among biogeochemical processes including organic carbon (OC)
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degradation, primary production and outgassing of CO2. For instance, Burt et al. identified the
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DIC contributions from biological activity and denitrification by means of the carbon isotopic
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fractionation factors in the North Sea.22 Thus, the combination of a δ13CDIC value and a DIC and
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TA pair makes it possible to better quantify DIC sources and sinks in coastal oceans.
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The Jiaozhou bay is greatly influenced by urbanization because the eastern region of the bay
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abuts downtown Qingdao, which has a population of approximately 4.8 million and discharges
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approximately 75% of its urban wastewater (~5.1×108 ton year-1) into the bay at present.23 Over
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the last two decades, not only have population and urban wastewater total amount increased
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rapidly (by 140% and 220%, respectively)24 but also more importantly the wastewater treatment
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rate has increased from a mere 40% in 1999 to 98.6% in 2016.21 Thus, this bay provides an
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excellent case study for how rapid urbanization and the development of modern WWTPs could
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affect coastal ocean carbon cycle and the environments. This study quantifies the contributions
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of main controls to DIC in the bay using stable carbon isotopic data and a ternary model based
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on DIC, δ13CDIC and TA data. The results indicate that DIC directly transported from wastewater
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discharge (wastewater DIC input) to the bay is larger than that from total OC degradation in the
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northeastern region of the bay. Noteworthily, the main detrimental environmental effect caused
85
by treated wastewater is to lower the pH level of the receiving waters. We suggest that
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wastewater DIC input is an important source of coastal ocean DIC and acidification, and it will
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play a more important role in the carbon cycle of coastal oceans in the future.
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MATERIALS AND METHODS
89
Study Area. The Jiaozhou Bay (35º18´-36º18´N, 120º04´-120º23´E) is a typical semi-enclosed
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bay with an average water depth of 7 m, which is surrounded by land on three sides and
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exchanges with the Yellow Sea just through the southern opening (Figure S1). The water
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residence time of the bay ranges from less than 20 days in the bay mouth to over 100 days in the
93
northwest.25 The tidal system is regular semi-diurnal with an average tidal range of 2.8 m. The
94
strong tidal effect leads to a vertically mixed water column all year round.25 There are seven
95
relatively large residual current eddies, which have significant influences on the material
96
transport in the Jiaozhou Bay.26
97
Sample collection and processing. Two cruises were conducted on 13 June and 1 July 2014 in
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the Jiaozhou Bay.. Thirty-five discrete surface water samples were collected using a 5-L Niskin
99
bottle during each cruise. Twelve surface sediment samples (0-4 cm) were also collected in the
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northern region of Jiaozhou Bay on 1 July 2014. Note that no heavy rain occurred within one
101
month before sampling and thus the influence of natural freshwater input was considered
102
negligible. In addition, wastewater samples were collected monthly from November 2014 to
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December 2015 in three municipal wastewater treatment plants located in the northeastern region
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of the bay.
105
The samples collected for δ13CDIC measurement were filtered into 12 ml septum-sealed glass
106
vials (Labco Limited) through a 0.45 µm cellulose acetate membrane (Whatman, Maidstone, UK)
107
and immediately poisoned by adding 8 µL saturated HgCl2. Samples for dissolved organic
108
carbon (DOC) were filtered through a 0.7 µm glass fiber membrane (Whatman, Maidstone, UK)
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and poisoned with saturated HgCl2.
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The surface sediment samples were kept in a freezer at -20°C. Prior to undergoing
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measurements of TOC% and δ13CPOC, all samples were crushed with a mortar after being
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freeze-dried for 48 h. Approximately 0.5 g of each treated sample was reacted with 5 mL 10%
113
hydrochloric acid for 10 hours to remove inorganic carbon. All samples were washed with
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distilled water until pH was neutral; after the supernatants were removed, the samples were
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freeze-dried and stored.
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Sample analyses and measurement precisions. The δ13CDIC and δ13CPOC values were
117
determined using a Gasbench II extraction line coupled with a Finnigan MAT 253 mass
118
spectrometer (Thermo Electron Corporation, USA) , and calibrated by IAEA-CO-1, a marble
119
from Viareggio, Italy. The results are given as per mil deviations from the standard (PDB) and
120
are denoted as δ13C.
121
(n=4), and based on the calculation method of Humphreys et al.,27 1-sigma measurement
122
precisions of sample duplicate measurements in δ13CDIC and δ13CPOC were 0.06‰ and 0.15‰.
123
The partial pressure of carbon dioxide (pCO2) and the carbon isotopic composition of CO2
124
(δ13CCO2) dissolved in seawater were measured using a G2131-i Analyzer for Isotopic CO2
125
(Picarro Inc., California, USA). The SD of the 5-min moving average of δ13CCO2 in one hour is
126
0.09‰ when the standard gas is at a level of 380 ppm. DOC was measured by a total organic
127
analyzer (TOC-Vcpn, Shimadzu Corporation, Kyoto, Japan) with a measurement precision of
128
±1%. TOC% value was determined using a CHN elemental analyzer (Thermo Flash 2000, USA).
129
Based on the repeated measurements of standards, the SD of these results was 0.04% (n=5).
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Temperature and salinity were measured continuously using an SBE 45 Micro TSG (Sea-Bird
The standard deviation (SD) of reference material measurements was 0.05‰
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Inc., Bellevue, WA, USA). DO saturation was measured using a YSI-5000 oxygen analyzer (YSI
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Corporation Yellow Spring, Ohio, USA) with a membrane electrode. pH was measured using an
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Orion 3-Star Plus pH Benchtop meter with a ROSS pH combination electrode (Thermo Fisher
134
Scientific Inc., Beverly, MA, USA) calibrated on the NIST scale. DIC was determined by acid
135
extraction using a total organic analyzer (TOC-Vcpn, Shimadzu Corporation, Kyoto, Japan). TA
136
was determined by Gran titration (AS-ALK2, Apollo SciTech, USA). Measurements of DIC and
137
TA were calibrated against certified reference material (CRM, provided by A.G. Dickson from
138
Scripps Institution of Oceanography). The 1-sigma measurement precisions of DIC and TA
139
analysis are 2.0 µmol kg-1 and 1.6 µmol kg-1. These hydrologic data and carbonate parameters
140
were reported by Li et al.28
141
The relationship between DIC addition or loss and deviation of δ13C. Previous studies have
142
defined deviations from the conservative mixing of freshwater and seawater when studying DIC
143
stable carbon isotopic patterns in estuaries and coastal oceans.18,20,21 These are applied to discuss
144
the effects of biogeochemical processes on DIC during physical mixing. In this approach, the
145
excess or deficient DIC is defined as DIC deviation in addition to the river-ocean mixing. In
146
some coastal bays with little river input, a single ocean end-member can be used as a reference
147
point and then the difference between the observed property and the oceanic contribution is
148
defined as the DIC addition or loss (∆DICexcess) in excess of the ocean contributions, which is
149
applied to assess terrestrial inputs (e.g. rivers, salt marshes and groundwater) and internal
150
biogeochemical processes.11,29-30 It is equally rigorous to use a two end-member (ocean and river)
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approach or a single end-member (ocean only) approach. In the Jiaozhou Bay, nearby rivers have
152
little natural runoff, while effluents from discrete WWTPs represent the main contributors to
153
freshwater. Therefore, it is suitable to use the ∆DICexcess based on a single ocean end-member to
154
evaluate the DIC contributions from wastewater DIC input and other biogeochemical processes.
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The calculation method is also applied to TA for ∆TAexcess.
156
ΔDIC = DIC − DIC
157
ΔTA = TA − TA
158
The subscripts “sample” and “ocean” denote the measured values and the ocean end-member
159
values, respectively; Ssample and Socean are the salinities of the sample and the ocean end-member,
160
respectively. The second term in Eq. (1) or Eq. (2) represents the oceanic contribution to sample
161
DIC or TA as ocean end-member is diluted from Socean to Ssample.
(1)
(2)
162
Similar to DIC, we use the difference between the measured δ13C value (δ13Csample) and the
163
δ13C value of the ocean end-member (δ13Cocean) to represent the isotopic deviation induced by
164
local processes from the ocean end-member, as shown in Eq. (3).
165
Δδ C
166
When DIC produced by OC degradation is added to the initial water or some DIC is removed by
167
primary production or CO2 outgassing, the isotopic composition of DIC is also altered following
168
the 13C mass balance equation.20
169
DIC δ C =
170
The δ13Cexcess in the equation is the carbon isotopic composition of the added or lost DIC.
!"
= δ C − δ C
DIC δ C
(3)
!"
+ ΔDIC δ C
(4)
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From Eq. (4), the carbon isotopic composition of the sample can be expressed as follows:
172
δ C =
173
From Eq. (1), we can obtain the next equation:
174
!"
!"
!"
!"
=1−
δ C +
% !"& !"
% !"& δ C !"
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(5)
(6)
175
Inserting Eq. (6) into Eq. (5) yields the following equation:
176
δ C − δ C =
177
(7)
178
Now, by the definition of Eq. (3), we can convert Eq. (7) into the following equation:
179
Δδ C
180
In coastal bays with limited freshwater input, the ∆DICexcess produced by a single process is small
181
(less than 10% of ocean end-member DIC) and then DICsample and DICocean are approximately the
182
same. Thus
183
Δδ C
184
Therefore, as expressed in Eq. (9), the
185
process are linearly related, and the slope of each relationship is equal to the difference in the
186
isotopic compositions of the added or lost DIC and the ocean end-member value, which
187
approximately equals the fractionation factor of each biogeochemical process at the current
188
situation20-22. Thus, in this paper, we will use the deviations in DIC and δ13CDIC values from
189
those of the ocean end-member to determine the main processes influencing DIC based on the
190
unique slope representing each process.
!"
!"
=
≈
% !"& !"
% !"& !"
% !"& !"
% !"& (δ C −δ C ) !"
(δ C −δ C )
can be replaced by
(8)
% !"& !"
and Eq. (8) can be further simplified to:
(δ C −δ C ) % !"& !"
(9) and ∆δ13CDIC values resulting from a single
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The CO2 produced by OC degradation has no substantial isotopic fractionation relative to
192
OC31 while the magnitude of isotopic signal change of OC degradation between OC and seawater
193
DIC is similar to the isotopic fractionation of primary production and they have opposing
194
directions.20-22 Therefore, the δ13C value of additional DIC or lost DIC due to net community
195
production is taken as δ13CPOC or δ13CDOC value. We use the average δ13CPOC value of 12 surface
196
sediments in the bay. The δ13C value of CO2 removed by outgassing was measured directly using
197
a CO2 carbon isotope analyzer coupled to a gas equilibrator. In addition, according to the study
198
performed by Emrich,32 the δ13C values of newly produced calcium carbonate can be calculated
199
using the following equation:
200
δ C" "+, = δ C-"+,. + (1.85 ± 0.23) + (T − 20) × (0.035 ± 0.013).
201
Since the HCO3- ion accounts for more than 90% of DIC species in the seawater here, the δ13C of
202
DIC is approximately equal to that of HCO3-. In terms of wastewater DIC input, the average
203
δ13CDIC value of all wastewater samples is interpreted to represent the δ13C of DIC produced by
204
wastewater DIC input.
(10)
205 206
RESULTS AND DISCUSSION
207
δ13CDIC and DIC concentrations of bay water. δ13CDIC values in the bay varied from -2.09‰ to
208
0.22‰, and they were more negative in June than July (Figure 1). More than two thirds of the
209
whole area showed negative values and the most negative values were in the northeastern region
210
of the bay. The depleted δ13CDIC values corresponded well with regions with low salinity (Figure
211
S2A, B), probably by effluents from municipal WWTPs. The δ13CDIC distribution also supports 11 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
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previous results that high DIC in the eastern area mainly came from terrestrial input.28 The
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δ13CDIC values from the western region and the mouth of the bay were slightly positive and
214
similar, while DIC concentrations were significantly lower in the west than those in the mouth of
215
the bay. The difference between the δ13CDIC and DIC distributions suggests that multiple
216
processes may have contributed to DIC in the bay.
217
TOC% and δ13CPOC of surface sediment. The total organic carbon content (TOC%) in the
218
sediments varied from 0.42% to 2.89%, decreasing from the eastern region of the bay to the west
219
(Figure 1C). The highest value emerged near the east coast of the bay, consistent with a recent
220
report in the same area.33 However, compared with data reported ten years ago (3.10%~8.96%),34
221
the TOC% in the eastern region decreased substantially while in the bay centre the TOC%
222
showed no obvious change. An improving wastewater treatment rate in the City of Qingdao24
223
may be the main reason for the sharp weakening of the terrestrial organic input signal. The
224
carbon isotopic composition of the particulate organic carbon (δ13CPOC) varied between -23.2‰
225
and -21.1‰ and increased from east to west (Figure 1C); the values were slightly more negative
226
than the characteristic value of marine OC (-20‰).35 The samples located near the east coast had
227
the most negative values, which corresponded well with the distribution of TOC%. We note that
228
TOC% and δ13CPOC had peak values along the east coast while DIC and δ13CDIC peaked in the
229
northeast. The reason for their lack of strict geographic consistency is that terrestrial coarse
230
particles sink to the bottom quickly near the WWTPs, while dissolved material can be
231
transported to the north because of the counterclockwise coastal current.26
232
Carbonate parameters of effluents from WWTPs. Considering that there is no natural river
233
inflow in the eastern region of the bay, three large-scale municipal WWTPs (Haibo River, Licun
234
River and Loushan River) nearby become the dominant contributor to terrestrial input. These 12 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
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plants have the designed disposal capability of 160, 250 and 100 thousand tons per day
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respectively. We obtained comprehensive carbonate data and isotopic compositions of DIC for
237
these three municipal WWTPs over one year. As shown in Figure 2, the monthly DIC
238
concentrations of the wastewater varied from 2554 to 5173 µmol kg-1; even the lowest value was
239
greater than that of coastal seawater (approximately 1800-2100 µmol kg-1). However, the DOC
240
concentrations only varied from 409 to 898 µmol kg-1. This is consistent with a recent report that
241
the average DIC concentration of nine small-scale (2-15 thousand tons per day) municipal
242
WWTPs in Germany was 3408 µmol kg-1 (40.9 mg L-1) and DOC concentration was 770 µmol
243
kg-1 (9.2 mg L-1).9 The TA values in our treated wastewater were also high and spanned a wide
244
monthly range (2402-4386 µmol kg-1), but they remained lower than DIC concentrations.
245
Moreover, we noted that pH values (7.30±0.21), TA/DIC ratios (0.93±0.05) and δ13CDIC values
246
(-11.8±1.01‰; SD, n=12) of the wastewater were relatively stable but were much lower than
247
those of coastal seawater. Thus, the discharge of the effluents from municipal WWTPs has the
248
great potential to disturb the coastal ocean carbonate system.
249
Processes affecting DIC. As stated in the Methods section, in this work, a single ocean
250
end-member is used to determine the overall DIC input from all terrestrial sources (dominated by
251
WWTPs) and the internal processes and isotope signals are used together with DIC to identify
252
the various sources and sinks of DIC. We notice that DIC addition or loss (∆DICexcess), defined in
253
Materials and Methods (Eq. 1), relative to the ocean end-member value (
254
linear relationships with the difference in the carbon isotopic composition from the ocean
255
end-member value (∆δ13CDIC) (Figure 3). Thus, we used these relationships to identify the
% !"& ) !"
exhibits
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control mechanisms of DIC in the bay (see Materials and Methods). As shown in Figure 3, DIC
257
additions occurred in the northeastern region and DIC losses occurred in the west whereas the
258
bay centre samples had minimum addition or loss. Almost all samples from the northeastern
259
region of the bay fall within the lower right or fourth (IV) quadrant. Among them, a few samples
260
from nearshore areas with high ∆DICexcess and very negative ∆δ13C values are distributed
261
between the two vectors and represent wastewater DIC input and OC degradation. Those
262
offshore samples locate close to the vector and represent OC degradation, but show less
263
∆DICexcess and elevated ∆δ13CDIC compared with the vector, which suggests that some of their
264
DIC is removed by either outgassing of CO2 (ref. 36) or calcium carbonate precipitation.37 Based
265
on the pCO2 level of approximately 1100 µatm and the pH of 7.8 (Figure S3) as well as a
266
relatively low aragonite saturation state level of less than 1.6 (Figure S4) observed in the
267
northeastern region, we conclude CaCO3 precipitation can be neglected here.38 The high pCO2
268
levels and long water residence times in the northeastern region of the bay25 support the effect of
269
outgassing of CO2. As all samples from the northeastern region are affected by outgassing of
270
CO2 to some extent, we suggest that the samples whose isotope-DIC relationship (Figure 3)
271
locates near the vector representing OC degradation can still be seriously influenced by
272
wastewater DIC input (showed by the purple outgassing arrows) even though OC degradation
273
appears to be the main contributor to DIC there.
274
In contrast, most of the samples in the west fall within the lower left quadrant III and are
275
located close to the vector representing carbonate precipitation. We note that the DO saturation
276
(DO%) in this region was approximately 100% (Figure S2C), indicating that net ecosystem
277
production cannot explain the observed DIC loss in this region and CaCO3 precipitation is the 14 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
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likely cause. Additional evidence supporting a CaCO3 precipitation mechanism is the
279
substantially loss of TA in the high-salinity region (Figure S5). The area near the Dagu River
280
estuary has a relatively high aragonite saturation state (Figure S4) and is an important shellfish
281
aquaculture area in the bay, where the production of shellfish in 2014 exceeded 2.9×105 tons.39
282
Thus, carbonate precipitation is most likely induced by aquaculture activity. Moreover, because
283
of the longest water residence time of over 100 days in the western region of the bay,25
284
continuous outgassing of CO2 must also influence the DIC level in this region. Thus, CaCO3
285
precipitation and CO2 outgassing dominate the loss of DIC in the western region.
286
Separating DIC contribution from each process. To further evaluate the perturbation of
287
treated wastewater in the coastal carbon cycle compared with natural biogeochemical processes,
288
it is necessary to build a source model for DIC to quantify the contribution from each process.
289
DIC addition or loss in coastal oceans, as defined by Jiang et al,30 mainly results from several
290
processes, including terrestrial input (terr), net ecosystem production (nep), sea-air CO2 exchange
291
(as) and calcium carbonate precipitation/dissolution (carb).30 The DIC addition or loss through
292
these processes can be explicitly expressed as follows:
293
ΔDIC = ΔDIC788 + ΔDIC + ΔDIC + ΔDIC 89
294
Note again in our system terrestrial input is dominated by wastewater discharge. In addition, for
295
the vertically-mixed bay, the DIC contribution of OC degradation in water column is not
296
separated from that in sediments at present.
297
The corresponding isotopic composition of the added or lost DIC due to all processes is defined
(11)
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298
in the following 13C mass balance equation:
299
ΔDIC δ C =
300
ΔDIC788 δ C788 + ΔDIC δ C + ΔDIC δ C + ΔDIC 89 δ C 89
301
Here, δ13Cterr, δ13Cnep, δ13Cas and δ13Ccarb are the δ13C values of DIC that are produced by the
302
above processes, respectively. For later calculation, we use the site values for δ13Cas and δ13Ccarb
303
and the mean values for δ13Cterr and δ13Cnep (see Methods and Materials).
(12)
304
It is known both TA and DIC will change following mass balance laws and specific
305
stoichiometric relationships when biogeochemical processes occur. In particular, carbonate
306
precipitation removes DIC and TA at a ratio of 1:2, while net primary production results in a
307
sharp decrease in DIC but only a small increase in TA (in a ratio of TA/DIC = -17/106).40
308
Moreover, TA does not change when sea-air CO2 exchange occurs. Because of these variations,
309
TA is used to build the third equation of the model. Similar to DIC, TA addition or loss can be
310
explicitly expressed by the following equation:
311
ΔTA = xΔDIC788 − 17/106 ΔDIC + 2ΔDIC 89
312
The letter x denotes the ratio of TA to DIC (TA/DIC) for terrestrial input. In a case of known
313
freshwater end-member, the contribution of terrestrial input can be obtained by freshwater
314
(wastewater here) DIC concentration and the proportion of freshwater in the seawater sample.11
315
Now with the three equations (11-13), if one of four terms is known or negligible, we can
316
calculate the contributions of three other processes.
317
(13)
In the northeastern region of the bay, CaCO3 precipitation was weak and can be neglected
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318
due to low pH conditions. Therefore, three factors (wastewater DIC input, net ecosystem
319
production and air-water exchange) can be solved by the three equations. To this end, we
320
estimate that the area influenced by wastewater input has a salinity of lower than 30.6 because
321
the DIC contribution from wastewater DIC input at this salinity value is less than 0.8% of the
322
sample DIC concentration based on the average DIC concentration of the wastewater and the
323
salinity of ocean ender-member. In other areas of the bay, with the salinity greater than 30.6, we
324
infer there is no terrestrial input occurring. By now, we are able to obtain the DIC sources and
325
sinks in the bay using the quantitative model built following the above procedure.
326
The model-calculated DIC contributed by wastewater DIC input (∆DICterr) varied from 33 to 287
327
µmol kg-1 in the northeastern region of the bay, while the DIC contributed by OC degradation
328
(∆DICnep, net effect of primary production and OC degradation) only varied from 47 to 125 µmol
329
kg-1 (Figure 4). Most notably, ∆DICterr was twice as large as ∆DICnep at the three nearshore
330
stations during June. CaCO3 precipitation caused the removal of DIC with the highest value of
331
54 µmol kg-1 in the western region. The DIC removed by CaCO3 precipitation (∆DICcarb)
332
decreased with distance offshore and fallen to only 5 µmol kg-1 in the centre of the bay.
333
Furthermore, the amount of DIC removed by the outgassing of CO2 (∆DICas) decreased from the
334
western and northeastern regions to the centre of the bay. The maximum value of 140 µmol kg-1
335
occurred in the west during June and was nearly three times as large as the ∆DICcarb value. The
336
large ∆DICas values in the western region of the bay are related to the shallow water depths (less
337
than 2m) and long water residence time in this region. The ∆DICas values were relatively smaller
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338
in July than June, consistent with a lower wind speed in the two weeks before the sampling days
339
in July than June (Figure S6). Overall, the amount of DIC from wastewater DIC input
340
approached and even exceeded that from OC degradation.
341
There are some uncertainties associated with model calculation. First, we ignored the
342
possible contribution from denitrification in sediments on DIC, but this contribution may be
343
minor, especially relative to wastewater DIC input and aerobic degradation of OC. This is
344
because treated wastewater has a lower total nitrogen concentration of less than 15 mg L-1 (ref.
345
41) due to advanced nitrogen removal technology, and thus the bay receives a much lower nitrate
346
loading. In contrast, the regions where denitrification in sediments provides substantial effluxes
347
of DIC receives a far larger nitrate loading usually from river input e.g. in the southern North
348
Sea.30,42 Moreover, if OC degradation occurs via anaerobic processes in shallow sediments, the
349
produced methane oxidation is another source for DIC. However, its role on increasing water
350
DIC is also relative small, given that the oxidation rate of methane in bottom water is low to 150
351
nmol L-1 d-1 in the bay43.
352
Coastal acidification induced by treated wastewater. One important effect of treated
353
wastewater input on environment is its contribution to coastal acidification. The influence of
354
wastewater input on pH represents re-equilibration of the carbonate system after mixing of
355
seawater and wastewater effluent. We quantified the pH drop (∆pH) only induced by physical
356
mixing in June 2014, assuming that the pH in the mouth of the bay represented the initial level of
357
the bay water. From the change in TA and DIC, the pH drop (∆pH) can be calculated via the
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358
CO2SYS program.44 The detailed procedures are as follows.
359
The concentrations of DIC and TA resulting from mixing of seawater and wastewater are:
360
DIC> = DIC
361
TA> = TA
362
The subscript “ocean” denotes the ocean end-member and the letter i denotes the station; ∆DICterr
363
and ∆TAterr are the contributions of the wastewater input to DIC and TA, respectively, which are
364
obtained using the source model for DIC; and x is the ratio of TA to DIC (TA/DIC), which is
365
0.93 in this calculation.
366
Then, the pH drop (∆pH) induced by mixing is calculated as follows:
367
ΔpH = f (DIC> , TA> , S> , T> ) − f (DIC , TA , S , T )
368
In this equation, f (DICi, TAi, Si, Ti) represents the pH resulting from mixing of seawater and
369
wastewater at a given temperature and salinity, and f (DICocean, TAocean, Socean, Tocean) is the pH
370
for the ocean end-member. As shown in Figure 5A, pH drop was maximum (∆pH = -0.09) in the
371
northeastern region and it diminished away from the wastewater source and approached near
372
zero in the central region of the bay.
?
?
+ [ΔDIC788 ]>
+ x[ΔDIC788 ]>
(14) (15)
(16)
373
Moreover, the wastewater discharge in the metropolitan area of Qingdao almost tripled from
374
1987 to 2013.23 We thus simulated variations in pH under different treated wastewater discharge
375
conditions using a simple dilution law as both population and wastewater discharge are expected
376
to increase in the next few decades. According to the results of the model, the relationship
377
between the contribution of wastewater DIC input (∆DICterr) and salinity (S) follows this
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378
equation (Figure S7):
379
ΔDIC788 = −211.48 × S + 6466.2 (r I = 0.98, n = 7)
380
Assuming that DIC and TA concentrations of the wastewater input remain unchanged and the
381
biologically contributed DIC and TA are not considered, the DIC and TA contributions resulting
382
from the increase in wastewater discharge can be expressed as follows:
383
[ΔDIC788 ] 8 = −211.48 × S 8 + 6466.2
(18)
384
[ΔTA788 ]pre = 0.93 × [ΔDIC788 ] 8
(19)
385
Spre denotes the predicted salinity for a certain wastewater discharge amount, which can be
386
calculated based on the proportion of freshwater and the dilution law. Note that if there is any
387
microbial decomposition of organic matter in the wastewater effluent, it will further increase
388
DIC and decrease pH.
389
According to mass balance, the sample salinity of a station can be defined as:
390
S> =
391
When wastewater discharge changes, the predicted salinity (Spre) becomes:
392
S 8 =
393
Here, Qocean and QF are the volumes of seawater and wastewater at a certain station, and y
394
denotes the ratio of the future wastewater discharge to the present one.
395
Combining Eq. (20) with Eq. (21) yields:
396
S 8 = P
397
Next, [∆DICterr]pre and [∆TAterr]pre are calculated. Then, the pH drop that occurs when the
M
(17)
(20)
M NMO
M
(21)
M NPMO
?
(22)
QP? N?
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398
wastewater discharge increases is also calculated using Eq. (14), Eq. (15) and Eq. (16). The
399
results showed the intensity and extent of influence on pH enlarged as expected when treated
400
wastewater discharge there triples (Figure 5B). At station #3, which records the lowest salinity
401
values, pH will decrease by 0.19 pH units, which is greater than the pH drop that has occurred in
402
ocean surface ocean water (0.1) since the Industrial Revolution.45 Moreover, pH drop and the
403
increment of sewage discharge are related by a quadratic function (r2=1, n=5) (Figure 5C). Note
404
that the acidification induced by wastewater DIC input is different from that induced by
405
degradation of OC from terrestrial input or eutrophication. The influence of wastewater DIC
406
input may just occur in the mixing layer, whereas the influence of OC degradation may occur in
407
the subsurface layer.46 Moreover, OC degradation is controlled by various natural factors such as
408
temperature and dissolved oxygen, and thus OC may not be degraded immediately in local under
409
adverse conditions (e.g. low temperature), which indicates that OC has enough time to be
410
transported to farther regions to induce acidification. However, wastewater DIC input causes an
411
immediate and continuous influence on water pH regardless of nature condition variability. More
412
importantly, with the wide construction of WWTPs and the improvement of wastewater
413
treatment technology, more POC and DOC in wastewater will be converted to DIC before
414
entering coastal oceans. This probably means additional acidification induced by wastewater
415
DIC input in excess of the effect of increasing atmospheric CO2 will be a growing problem
416
worldwide.
417
Global implications. In summary, treated wastewater characterized by low pH and high pCO2
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418
can lead to seawater acidification in many coastal areas, exemplified by the urbanized Jiaozhou
419
Bay. Many coastal regions, mainly including some bays and estuaries, are adjacent to big cities
420
and thus receive high wastewater loadings. These bays are vulnerable for acidification caused by
421
treated wastewater due to poor water exchange with open ocean, such as the Jiaozhou Bay.
422
Among them, the areas with water hypoxia47 may also suffer a greater acidification due to the
423
combined effect of anthropogenic CO2, CO2 from biological acidification (OC respiration), and
424
DIC from WWTPs. In addition, the acidification effect in low salinity estuary can be also
425
severe48 because low TA to DIC ratio of rivers lead to a weak buffering capacity. According to
426
incomplete data (from 116 countries) from FAO,8 the global municipal wastewater discharge in
427
2014 was 309.2 billion cubic meters while the current treatment rate is approximately 64%, the
428
rate for developed countries is even greater than 77% (Figure S8). This means that inorganic
429
carbon is the primary export form for over half of municipal wastewater, because more than 90%
430
of OC is removed during wastewater treatment prior to discharging into natural waters,49
431
especially in the coastal areas of developed countries. Although 90% of wastewater in many
432
developing countries is untreated,50 the treatment infrastructures in some countries with the rapid
433
economic growth are currently going through a period of rapid development. For instance, the
434
urban wastewater treatment rate in Chile increased from only 8% to almost 87% in 2010.51
435
However, other large developing countries still have low treatment rates, e.g., Brazil and India at
436
only about 30%,8 and have a great potential to improve their rates of treatment.
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437
There is no doubt that the DIC fluxes from treated wastewater to coastal oceans are
438
increasing with improved treatment rate and a rapid growth of the population in coastal regions.
439
According to data collected by the FAO,8 the average annual growth rate of municipal
440
wastewater discharge from 2007 to 2014 was 0.86% in 20 developed countries (from a total for
441
28), while it was approximately 5.8% in 59 developing countries. Assuming that these growth
442
rates remain unchanged, the predicted global municipal wastewater discharge in 2030 will be
443
approximately 563 billion cubic meters. This value is probably an underestimate because these
444
data cover only major countries and some industrial wastewater is not drained into municipal
445
wastewater systems. For example, the industrial wastewater discharge of China in 2014 was up
446
to 20.5 billion tons52, but it is not counted in municipal wastewater discharge.
447
increasing amounts of treated wastewater will further increase acidity and influence the strength
448
of CO2 source/sink with respect to the atmosphere in coastal oceans. In addition, it is unrealistic
449
to apply organic fluxes as total carbon fluxes for anthropogenic wastewater in future land-ocean
450
carbon cycle model and the organic carbon removal and transformation during wastewater
451
treatment process thoroughly should be better considered.
Therefore,
452 453
ASSOCIATED CONTENT
454
Supporting Information
455
Sampling stations and tracks, spatial distributions of basic hydrological parameters including
456
salinity, temperature, dissolved oxygen saturation, pCO2 and pH, ∆DICexcess and ∆TAexcess, the
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457
wind speeds during sampling, the ratio of treated to untreated wastewater for the world are
458
included in the Supporting Information file.
459 460
ACKNOWLEDGMENT: The authors acknowledge financial support from the National
461
Science Foundation of China (NSFC) (Grant No. 41376123), the National Science Foundation of
462
China - Shandong Joint Fund for Marine Science Research Centres (NSFC) (Grant No.
463
U1406404), the National Science Foundation for Creative Research Groups (Grant No.
464
41521064) and the FIO basic science and research programs (Grant No. 2016Q01). W-J.C.
465
acknowledges support from NSF, NASA and NOAA for his coastal ocean carbon cycling and
466
acidification research
467
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52. Environmental Statistics Annual Report 2006-2015; Ministry of environmental protection in
602
China, Beijing, 2006-2015. http://www.zhb.gov.cn/gzfw_13107/hjtj/hjtjnb.
603 604 605
FIGURES
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Figure 1. Spatial distributions of surface water DIC and its isotopic composition in (A) June
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2014 and (B) July 2014 and (C) TOC% and δ13CPOC of the surface sediment samples in July
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2014. The δ13CDIC and δ13CPOC are plotted in contours, while the DIC and TOC% in colors. The 32 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
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black stars show the locations of three municipal wastewater treatment plants. Treated
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wastewater is discharged into the bay directly. The sediment samples are thinner than 4cm and
612
can record the impact of changing environmental conditions within one to two years. Note that
613
the DIC data was from Li et al.28
614 615
616 617
Figure 2. Temporal variations in carbonate parameters of treated wastewater from the three
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WWTPs. The samples from Haibo River and Licun River WWTPs were not collected in January
619
2015. These WWTPs apply primary (bar screen and primary settler) and secondary 33 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
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(anoxia/anaerobic/oxic digester and secondary clarifier) treatments based on an activated sludge
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system. The daily treatment loads of the Haibo River, Licun River and Loushan River WWTPs
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are approximately 86, 170 and 100 thousand tons, respectively.
623
624 625
Figure 3. The deviation in δ13CDIC (Δδ C
626
end-member R
627
represents the difference between observed property and the oceanic contribution as calculated
628
by Jiang et al.30 The plot is divided into four quadrants (I, II, III and IV). The origin represents
629
sample values equal to the ocean end-member value. The vectors passing through the origin
630
indicate the theoretical effect of each process affecting DIC. Those slopes representing
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degradation of OC and primary production, outgassing of CO2, CaCO3 precipitation and
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wastewater DIC input are -22.2‰, -9.4‰, 1.5‰ and -12.0‰, respectively (Table S1), which are
% !"& !"
!" )
versus DIC addition or loss relative to the ocean
S in June and July 2014. The DIC addition or loss (∆DICexcess)
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equal to the difference between the δ13C values produced by each process and the ocean
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end-member value (see Materials and Methods for details). The purple arrows indicate sample
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moving directions when degassing occurs. Sample pCO2 values are given in color with the
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associated color bar presented.
637 638
Figure 4. Distribution of DIC produced by OC degradation and wastewater DIC input and DIC 35 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
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removed by carbonate precipitation and CO2 outgassing in (A) June and (B) July. A reference
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size of the pie in the legend represents 220 µmol kg-1 of DIC. ∆DICterr represents DIC changes
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contributed by wastewater DIC input. ∆DICnep represents the net effect of DIC loss by primary
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production and addition by OC degradation. The values in the bay are all positive, indicating
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biological process is dominated by OC degradation. In addition, DIC changes due to air-sea CO2
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exchange, ∆DICas, and DIC changes due CaCO3 precipitation, ∆DICcarb, are negative and the
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results well support the above conclusion that carbonate precipitation and CO2 outgassing have
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important impacts on DIC concentrations during these two cruises.
647
648 649
Figure 5. Distribution of the pH drop (∆pH) induced by wastewater DIC input. (A) pH drop due
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to present wastewater discharge and (B) due to a twofold increase in it. (C) The relationship
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between the increments of treated wastewater discharge compared to the present one and pH
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drop in station #3. The pH was calculated on the NIST scale by the CO2SYS program.44 The
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letter Q represents the present wastewater discharge of the three WWTPs that is located in the
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northeast of the Jiaozhou Bay.
655 656 657
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