TY - RPRT T1 - Spatial and temporal variations in pCO2 and atmospheric CO2 exchanges in a temperate salt marsh system A1 - Mayen,Jeremy AD - IFREMER, Laboratoire Environnement et Ressources des Pertuis Charentais (LER-PC), F-17390 La Tremblade, France AD - Univ Pau et des Pays de l'Adour, Master 1 BME, 64013 Pau, France UR - https://archimer.ifremer.fr/doc/00636/74772/ KW - temperate salt marsh system KW - typology/management practice KW - water carbon dynamic KW - water-atmosphere CO2 flux KW - biological pump KW - hydrodynamic advection KW - CO2 source/sink. N2 - Coastal environments such as the Charentais Sounds are key systems in the biogeochemical cycles coupling (C, N, P) between the land, the ocean and  the atmosphere. Within the coastal zone, salt marshes are considered as CO2 sinks associated to their significant autotrophic metabolism and sediment carbon (C) storage. However, this ecological functioning is more and more threatened by global change (acidification, sea level rise, eutrophication) and anthropogenic pressures decreasing blue C area potential worldwide. C dynamics over salt marshes are complex since various processes and fluxes take place at the different terrestrial-aquatic-atmospheric exchange interfaces at the spatio-temporal scales of the coastal zone. The ANR-PAMPAS research project allows a better understanding of marsh ecological functioning located in the Charentais Sounds according to their typology and management practices faced oceanic submersion risks. Related to the blue C sink ecological functioning, this internship specifically focused on the dynamic of water partial pressures of CO2 (pCO2) and associated relevant environmental parameters at diurnal, tidal and seasonal scales along a dyked salt marsh – channel – bay continuum within the Fier d’Ars coastal wetland (Ré Island). The diurnal/tidal measurements carried out from year 2018 to 2020 at stations along the continuum highlighted a strong biological control on water pCO2 and associated metabolisms at diurnal and seasonal scales according to station typology and management practices too. During spring-summer seasons at dyked salt marsh stations, photosynthesis activity of macroalgae, seagrass and phytoplankton produced large CO2 undersaturation. To the contrary during winter-autumn seasons, lower biological activity associated with microbial loop-type network particularly at channel water station induced large CO2 oversaturation with regards to the atmosphere. Other non-temperature effect such as coastal water advection significantly influenced diurnal water CO2 dynamics among connected stations. Over the year, the majority of the studied stations (bay and dyked marshes) behaved as CO2 sinks (-0.03 ± 0.17 and -0.26 ± 0.38 mmol m2 h-1 at Fier d’Ars Bay and Loix marsh respectively) while only the channel station connecting coastal waters of the bay to dyked marshes represented a CO2 source to the atmosphere (+0.16 ± 0.24 mmol m2 h-1).   Y1 - 2020/06 PB - Université de Pau & des Pays de l'Adour ID - 74772 ER -