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Reactivity of dissolved organic matter in response to acid deposition

Authors :
Sara M. Ekström
Emma S. Kritzberg
Margareta Sandahl
P. Anders Nilsson
Dan Berggren Kleja
Source :
Aquatic Sciences. 78:463-475
Publication Year :
2015
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2015.

Abstract

Fluvial export of organic matter from the terrestrial catchment to the aquatic system is a large and increasing carbon flux. The successful reduction in sulfuric acid deposition since the 1980s has been shown to enhance the mobility of organic matter in the soil, with more terrestrially derived dissolved organic matter (DOM) reaching aquatic systems. Changes in soil acidity also affect the quality of the DOM. In this study we explore the consequences this may have on the reactivity and turnover of the terrestrially derived DOM as it reaches the aquatic system. DOM of different quality (estimated by absorbance, fluorescence and size exclusion chromatography) was produced through extraction of boreal forest O-horizon soils from podzol at two sulfuric acid concentrations corresponding to natural throughfall in spruce forest in Southern Sweden around 1980 and today. Extraction was done using two different methods, i.e. field leaching and laboratory extraction. The DOM extracts were used to assess if differences in acidity generate DOM of different reactivity. Three reactivity experiments were performed: photodegradation by UV exposure, biodegradation by bacteria, and biodegradation after UV exposure. Reactivity was assessed by measuring loss of dissolved organic carbon and absorbance, change in fluorescence and molecular weight, and bacterial production. DOM extracted at lower sulfuric acid concentration was more susceptible to photooxidation, and less susceptible to bacterial degradation, than DOM extracted at a higher sulfuric acid concentration. Thus the relative importance of these two turnover processes may be altered with changes in acid deposition.

Details

ISSN :
14209055 and 10151621
Volume :
78
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Aquatic Sciences
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........2d48f4fe931308546d3c29cd249c1dfa
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00027-015-0453-0