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Abstract Global trends in river nitrogen yields reflect human distortion of the global nitrogen cycle. Climate change and increasing agricultural intensity are projected to enhance river nitrogen yields in temperate watersheds and impair downstream water quality. However, little is known about the environmental drivers of nitrogen yields in major Arctic rivers, which have experienced rapid climatic changes and are important conduits of nutrients and organic matter to the Arctic Ocean. Here we analyze trends in nitrogen yields in the six largest Arctic rivers between 2003 and 2023 and develop generalized additive models to elucidate the watershed characteristics and climatic processes associated with observed spatial and interannual variability. We found significant increases in dissolved organic nitrogen yield and/or declines in dissolved inorganic nitrogen yield in four of the six rivers. While temperature and precipitation, via their relationships to discharge, enhance dissolved nitrogen yields, we attribute the diverging trends to the responses of inorganic and organic nitrogen to temperature via effects on permafrost free extent. Spatially, we attribute differences in nitrogen yields across watersheds to differences in land cover and temperature. Shifts in the amount and composition of river nitrogen yields will impact the balance between primary productivity and heterotrophy in nitrogen limited coastal Arctic Ocean ecosystems. Results from this work highlight the importance of climate‐driven changes in temperature and precipitation on river nitrogen yields in large Arctic rivers and motivate further investigation into how permafrost loss and hydrological shifts interact to drive water quality and biogeochemical cycling in the region.more » « less
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Abstract Fresh submarine groundwater discharge (FSGD) can deliver significant fluxes of water and solutes from land to sea. In the Arctic, which accounts for ∼34% of coastlines globally, direct observations and knowledge of FSGD are scarce. Through integration of observations and process‐based models, we found that regardless of ice‐bonded permafrost depth at the shore, summer SGD flow dynamics along portions of the Beaufort Sea coast of Alaska are similar to those in lower latitudes. Calculated summer FSGD fluxes in the Arctic are generally higher relative to low latitudes. The FSGD organic carbon and nitrogen fluxes are likely larger than summer riverine input. The FSGD also has very high CO2making it a potentially significant source of inorganic carbon. Thus, the biogeochemistry of Arctic coastal waters is potentially influenced by groundwater inputs during summer. These water and solute fluxes will likely increase as coastal permafrost across the Arctic thaws.more » « less
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Abstract Terrestrial groundwater travels through subterranean estuaries before reaching the sea. Groundwater‐derived nutrients drive coastal water quality, primary production, and eutrophication. We determined how dissolved inorganic nitrogen (DIN), dissolved inorganic phosphorus (DIP), and dissolved organic nitrogen (DON) are transformed within subterranean estuaries and estimated submarine groundwater discharge (SGD) nutrient loads compiling > 10,000 groundwater samples from 216 sites worldwide. Nutrients exhibited complex, nonconservative behavior in subterranean estuaries. Fresh groundwater DIN and DIP are usually produced, and DON is consumed during transport. Median total SGD (saline and fresh) fluxes globally were 5.4, 2.6, and 0.18 Tmol yr−1for DIN, DON, and DIP, respectively. Despite large natural variability, total SGD fluxes likely exceed global riverine nutrient export. Fresh SGD is a small source of new nutrients, but saline SGD is an important source of mostly recycled nutrients. Nutrients exported via SGD via subterranean estuaries are critical to coastal biogeochemistry and a significant nutrient source to the oceans.more » « less
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