Interspecific differences in root exudation for three tropical seagrasses and sediment pore-water dissolved organic carbon beneath them

2021 ◽  
Vol 173 ◽  
pp. 113059
Author(s):  
Linglan Li ◽  
Zhijian Jiang ◽  
Yunchao Wu ◽  
Jialu He ◽  
Yang Fang ◽  
...  
2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Gabrielle R. Quadra ◽  
Sebastian Sobek ◽  
José R. Paranaíba ◽  
Anastasija Isidorova ◽  
Fábio Roland ◽  
...  

Abstract. Reservoir sediments sequester significant amounts of organic carbon (OC), but at the same time, high amounts of methane (CH4) can be produced during the degradation of sediment OC. Hydropower is expanding in the Amazon basin, but the potential effects of river damming on the biogeochemistry of the Amazon river system can at present not be gauged due to a lack of studies. Here we present results from the first investigation of OC burial and CH4 concentrations in the sediments of an Amazonian reservoir. We performed sub-bottom profiling, sediment coring and sediment pore water analysis in the Curuá-Una reservoir (Amazon, Brazil) during rising and falling water periods. A mean sediment accumulation rate of 0.6 cm yr−1 and a mean OC burial rate of 91 g C m−2 yr−1 were found, which is the highest OC burial rate on record for low-latitude reservoirs, probably resulting from high OC deposition onto the sediment compensating for high OC mineralization at 28–30 °C water temperature. Elevated OC burial was found near the dam, and close to major river inflow areas. C : N ratios between 10.3 and 17 (mean ± SD: 12.9 ± 2.1) indicate that both land-derived and aquatic OC accumulate in CUN sediments. About 29 % of the sediment pore water samples had dissolved CH4 close to saturation concentration, a higher share than other hydroelectric reservoirs, indicating a high potential for CH4 ebullition, particularly in river inflow areas.


2017 ◽  
Author(s):  
Tatiana V. Raudina ◽  
Sergey V. Loiko ◽  
Artyom Lim ◽  
Ivan V. Krickov ◽  
Liudmila S. Shirokova ◽  
...  

Abstract. Mobilization of dissolved organic carbon (DOC) and related trace elements (TE) from the frozen peat to surface waters in the permafrost zone is one the major consequence of on-going permafrost thaw and active layer thickness (ALT) rise in high latitude regions. The interstitial soil solutions are efficient tracers of on-going bio-geochemical processes in the critical zone and can help to decipher the intensity of carbon and metals migration from the soil to the rivers and further to the ocean. To this end, we collected, across a 640 km latitudinal transect of sporadic to continuous permafrost zone of western Siberia peatlands, soil porewaters from 30 cm depth using suction cups and we analyzed DOC, DIC and 40 major and TE in 0.45 µm filtered fraction of 80 soil porewaters. Despite an expected decrease of the intensity of DOC and TE mobilization from the soil and vegetation litter to the interstitial fluids with the increase of the permafrost coverage, decrease in the annual temperature and ALT, the DOC and many major and trace element did not exhibit any distinct decrease in concentration along the latitudinal transect from 62.2° N to 67.4° N. The DOC demonstrated a maximum of concentration at 66° N, on the border of discontinuous/continuous permafrost zone, whereas the DOC concentration in peat soil solutions from continuous permafrost zone was equal or higher than that in sporadic/discontinuous permafrost zone. Moreover, a number of major (Ca, Mg) and trace (Al, Ti, Sr, Ga, REEs, Zr, Hf, Th) elements exhibited an increasing, not decreasing northward concentration trend. We hypothesize that the effect of temperature and thickness of the ALT are of secondary importance relative to the leaching capacity of peat which is in turn controlled by the water saturation of the peat core. The water residence time in peat pores also plays a role in enriching the fluids in some elements: the DOC, V, Cu, Pb, REE, Th were a factor of 1.5 to 2.0 higher in mounds relative to hollows. As such, it is possible that the time of reaction between the peat and downward infiltrating waters essentially controls the degree of peat pore-water enrichments in DOC and other solutes. A two-degree northward shift in the position of the permafrost boundaries may bring about a factor of 1.3 decrease in Ca, Mg, Sr, Al, Fe, Ti, Mn, Ni, Co, V, Zr, Hf, Th and REE porewater concentration in continuous and discontinuous permafrost zones, and a possible decrease in DOC, SUVA, Ca, Mg, Fe and Sr will not exceed 20 % of their actual values. The projected increase of ALT and vegetation density, northward migration of the permafrost boundary, or the change of hydrological regime are unlikely to modify chemical composition of peat pore water fluids larger than their natural variations within different micro-landscapes, i.e., within a factor of 2.


2020 ◽  
Vol 703 ◽  
pp. 135585
Author(s):  
Catharine M. Pschenyckyj ◽  
Joanna M. Clark ◽  
Liz J. Shaw ◽  
Robert I. Griffiths ◽  
Chris D. Evans

Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document