Factors affecting 13C/12C ratios of inland halophytes. I. Controlled studies on growth and isotopic composition of Puccinellia nuttalliana

1986 ◽  
Vol 64 (11) ◽  
pp. 2693-2699 ◽  
Author(s):  
Robert D. Guy ◽  
David M. Reid ◽  
H. Roy Krouse

Studies on various factors affecting the growth and stable carbon isotope composition of the graminaceous C3 halophyte Puccinellia nuttalliana (Schultes) Hitch. were initiated as a step towards interpreting δ13C variations in nature. For isotope analysis, combustion at 900 °C resulted in higher CO2 yield than at 550 °C but did not affect δ13C values. Differences in δ13C between leaves of different insertion level were unimportant, but roots were about 1‰ more positive than shoots. Trends in δ13C with salinity were the same in all plant parts. Depressions of growth by NaCl or Na2SO4 were similar, but plants grown in Na2SO4 displayed a greater shift in δ13C relative to controls. Growth rates were affected more by salinity than were previously reported photosynthetic rates. At typical salinities, δ13C changed linearly with salinity. The supply of nitrate to stressed and unstressed plants had no important influence on δ13C. Growth in polyethylene glycol produced δ13C values consistent with a high level of stress. After a salinity step-up, changes in δ13C were complete within 10 days. During winter, data were found to be heavily influenced by unintentional, human-respired CO2 enrichment. This represents a potentially serious research problem in laboratories of temperate climes.

2018 ◽  
Author(s):  
Wenqi Zhang ◽  
Yan-Lin Zhang ◽  
Fang Cao ◽  
Yankun Xiang ◽  
Yuanyuan Zhang ◽  
...  

Abstract. Water soluble organic carbon (WSOC) is a significant fraction of organic carbon (OC) in atmospheric aerosols. WSOC is of great interest due to its significant effects on atmospheric chemistry, the Earth’s climate and human health. Stable carbon isotope (δ13C) can be used to track the potential sources and investigate atmospheric processes of organic aerosols. In this study, a method of simultaneously measuring the mass concentration and δ13C values of WSOC from aerosol samples is established by coupling the Gas Bench II preparation device with isotopic ratio mass spectrometry. The precision and accuracy of isotope determination is better than 0.17 ‰ and 0.5 ‰, respectively, for samples containing carbon larger than 5 μg. This method is then applied for the high time-resolution aerosol samples during a severe wintertime haze period in Nanjing, East China. WSOC varies between 3–32 μg m−3, whereas δ13C-WSOC ranges from −26.24 ‰ to −23.35 ‰. Three different episodes (e.g., namely the Episode 1, the Episode 2, the Episode 3) are identified in the sampling period, showing a different tendency of δ13C-WSOC with the accumulation process of WSOC aerosols. The increases in both the WSOC mass concentrations and the δ13C-WSOC values in the Episode 1 indicate that WSOC is subject to a substantial photochemical aging during the air mass transport. In the Episode 2, the decline of the δ13C-WSOC is accompanied by the increase in the WSOC mass concentrations, which is associated with regional-transported biomass burning emissions. In the Episode 3, heavier isotope (13C) is exclusively enriched in total carbon (TC) compares to WSOC aerosols. This suggests that water-insoluble carbon may contain 13C-enriched components such as dust carbonate which is supported by the enhanced Ca2+ concentrations and air mass trajectories analysis. The present study provides a novel method to determine stable carbon isotope composition of WSOC and it offers a great potential to better understand the source emission, the atmospheric aging and the secondary production of water soluble organic aerosols.


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