Melt ponds and leads water sampling for biogeochemical parameters during expedition PS122/5 (MOSAiC Leg 5) to the central Arctic in August-September 2020

Melt ponds water sampling for biogeochemical parameters such as dissolved inorganic carbon (DIC), total alkalinity (TA), oxygen isotopes were examined from August to September 2020. To obtain discrete water samples from the melt ponds and leads, we checked the vertical structure and depth of the meltwater layer from the same hole used for the RINKO Profiler by attaching a conductivity sensor (Cond 315i, WTW GmbH, Germany) to a 2-m-long ruler and inserting the ruler into the lead water until the salinity measured with the Cond 315i increased at the meltwater–seawater interface (Nomura et al., 2024) . Water was pumped up with a peristaltic pump through a 2-m-long PTFE tube (L/S Pump Tubing, Masterflex, USA) at depths corresponding to meltwater (surface), the interface between meltwater and seawater (interface), and seawater (bottom). Salinity was measured at each depth by attaching a Cond 315i conductivity sensor to the bottom of the ruler. The tube intake was likewise attached to the bottom of the ruler. Seawater was subsampled into a 250-mL glass vial (Duran Co., Ltd., Germany) for measurement of dissolved inorganic carbon (DIC) and total alkalinity (TA) and a 50-mL glass, screw-cap, narrow-neck vial (VWR international LLC, Germany) for measurement of the oxygen isotopic ratio (δ18O) of the water. Immediately after subsampling for measurement of DIC and TA, a 6.0% (wt.) mercuric chloride (HgCl2) solution (100 µL) was added to stop biological activity. Samples for DIC and TA were stored at +4°C on the R/V Polarstern. Samples for δ18O were stored at room temperature (20°C). During the discrete water sampling, the CO2 concentration in the water column was measured directly on site by passing the water through an equilibrator Liqui-Cel® (G542, S/N: 132462, 3M Company, USA) connected to an infrared gas analyzer (LI-8100A, LI-COR Inc., USA). The analyzer was calibrated with standard gases containing 0.0, 299.3, and 501.3 ppm CO2 before MOSAiC Leg 5. RMS (root means square) noise at 370 ppm with 1 sec signal averaging is <1 ppm (https://www.licor.com/env/products/soil-flux/LI-8100a). The equilibrator was connected in the loop for water sampling (vide supra), and a 2-m-long ruler was inserted into the water and kept at that depth until the CO2 was equilibrated with air (about 1 minute) by monitoring the CO2 values. The CO2 concentration was measured at each depth (i.e., surface, interface, and bottom). At the ROV lead sites, vertical CO2 measurements were made every 0.05 m for detailed profiles. The DIC of water was determined by coulometry (Johnson et al., 1985; Johnson, 1992) using a home-made CO2 extraction system (Ono et al., 1998) and a coulometer (CM5012, UIC, Inc., Binghamton, NY, USA). The TA of water was determined by titration (Dickson et al., 2007) using a TA analyzer (ATT-05, Kimoto Electric Co., Ltd., Japan). Both DIC and TA measurements were calibrated with reference seawater materials (Batch AR, AU, and AV; KANSO Technos Co., Ltd., Osaka, Japan) traceable to the Certified Reference Material distributed by Prof. A. G. Dickson (Scripps Institution of Oceanography, La Jolla, CA, USA). Oxygen isotope analyses were carried out at the ISOLAB Facility at AWI Potsdam (hdl:10013/sensor.ddc92f54-4c63-492d-81c7-696260694001) with mass spectrometers (DELTA-S Finnigan MAT, USA): hdl:10013/sensor.af148dea-fe65-4c87-9744-50dc4c81f7c9 and hdl:10013/sensor.62e86761-9fae-4f12-9c10-9b245028ea4c employing the equilibration method (details in Meyer et al., 2000). δ18O values were given in per mil (‰) vs. Vienna standard mean ocean water (V-SMOW) as the standard.

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