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Anaerobic organic carbon mineralization in tidal wetlands along a low-level salinity gradient of a subtropical estuary: Rates, pathways, and controls.

Authors :
Luo, Min
Zhu, Wenfeng
Huang, Jiafang
Liu, Yuxiu
Duan, Xun
Wu, Jie
Tong, Chuan
Source :
Geoderma. Mar2019, Vol. 337, p1245-1257. 13p.
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

Abstract To examine how the rates and pathways of anaerobic organic carbon mineralization (AOCM) of tidal freshwater wetlands change with low-level increases in salinity, we investigated the rates and controls of microbial iron and sulfate reduction, methane production, and total AOCM in tidal wetlands along a freshwater to oligohaline (0.1–3.3 ppt) gradient in the Min River Estuary in southeastern China. Porewater chloride was found to be strongly correlated with total organic carbon (TOC), carbon to nitrogen (C:N) ratios, and porewater geochemistry (sulfate, pH, ammonium, and dissolved methane levels). Furthermore, a higher plant biomass, larger iron oxides pool, and lower sulfide levels were observed in the oligohaline wetlands. The contribution of microbial sulfate reduction to AOCM increased from 16% to 67%. In contrast, the contribution of microbial iron reduction and methane production declined from 52% to 22% and 12% to 2%, respectively, along the increasing salinity gradient. No consistent changes were found in the total AOCM rates. The rates of methane production were primarily controlled by the C:N ratios and concentrations of porewater ammonium and amorphous iron oxides, while the microbial sulfate and iron reduction rates were mainly controlled by belowground biomass, water content, and concentrations of porewater chloride and sulfate. Our findings provide insight into the potential consequences of modest saltwater intrusion; these may not alter the rates of AOCM in the Min River Estuary, but could change the dominant AOCM pathway from microbial iron reduction to sulfate reduction and accelerate sulfidic effects in this historically freshwater wetland ecosystem. Graphical abstract Unlabelled Image Highlights • The rates of total anaerobic organic matter mineralization are tolerant to a low-level increase in salinity. • The anaerobic organic matter mineralization pathway is sensitive to minor salinity changes. • Salinity are responsible for the decline in microbial iron reduction, suppression of methane production, and enhancement of sulfate reduction. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00167061
Volume :
337
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Geoderma
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
133719318
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.geoderma.2018.07.030