Abstract Details
(2020) Spatial and Temporal Variability of Inorganic Carbon Export from Intertidal Salt Marshes
Tamborski J, Gonneea ME, Kroeger K, Wang ZA, Henderson P, Kurylyk B & Charette M
https://doi.org/10.46427/gold2020.2542
The author has not provided any additional details.
12c: Plenary Hall, Wednesday 24th June 22:30 - 22:33
Joseph Tamborski
View abstracts at 2 conferences in series
Meagan Eagle Gonneea
Kevin Kroeger View abstracts at 9 conferences in series
Zhaoihui Aleck Wang
Paul Henderson
Barret Kurylyk View abstracts at 2 conferences in series
Matthew Charette View abstracts at 9 conferences in series
Meagan Eagle Gonneea
Kevin Kroeger View abstracts at 9 conferences in series
Zhaoihui Aleck Wang
Paul Henderson
Barret Kurylyk View abstracts at 2 conferences in series
Matthew Charette View abstracts at 9 conferences in series
Listed below are questions that have been submitted by the community that the author will try and cover in their presentation. To submit a question, ensure you are signed in to the website. Authors or session conveners approve questions before they are displayed here.
Submitted by Christopher Sabine on Tuesday 16th June 23:10
Do these study sites ever freeze in the winter? If so, how would that impact the fluxes you observed?
Do these study sites ever freeze in the winter? If so, how would that impact the fluxes you observed?
Submitted by Pierre St-Laurent on Thursday 18th June 19:49
I'm not familiar with this type of work but I found the video very interesting. You mentioned the uncertainties in Najjar's 2018 budget as a motivation for this work. My question is---how expensive is it to conduct this fieldwork? As a community, can we hope to multiply these measurements along the U.S. east coast (i.e., "scale up") over the next decade and obtain a more accurate estimate of the fluxes? Or, is the spatial and temporal variability so large that we are only scratching the surface? (Again, I'm not familiar with this type of work, I'm trying to see the big picture.) Thanks! Pierre
I'm not familiar with this type of work but I found the video very interesting. You mentioned the uncertainties in Najjar's 2018 budget as a motivation for this work. My question is---how expensive is it to conduct this fieldwork? As a community, can we hope to multiply these measurements along the U.S. east coast (i.e., "scale up") over the next decade and obtain a more accurate estimate of the fluxes? Or, is the spatial and temporal variability so large that we are only scratching the surface? (Again, I'm not familiar with this type of work, I'm trying to see the big picture.) Thanks! Pierre
Sign in to ask a question.