Back to Search Start Over

Contrasting estuarine processing of dissolved organic matter derived from natural and human‐impacted landscapes

Authors :
Mark C. Stinchcombe
Ian Mounteney
Deborah Yarrow
Stacey L. Felgate
M. Glória Pereira
Andrew P. Rees
Ian Brown
Justyna Olszewska
Philip D. Nightingale
James R Fishwick
Nina Godsell
G. W. Hargreaves
Anna Lichtschlag
Kate Peel
Michael J. Bowes
Edward Mawji
Bryan M. Spears
Dan Lapworth
Jennifer Williamson
Stuart C. Painter
Daniel J. Mayor
E. Malcolm S. Woodward
Andrew Tye
Nathan Callaghan
John Stephens
Mike Fraser
Oban Jones
Peter Williams
Adrian Martin
Stuart W. Gibb
Chris D. Evans
Pete J. Gilbert
Richard Sanders
Sarah Breimann
Annette Burden
Rebecca May
Africa P. Gomez-Castillo
Amy Pickard
Paul Kennedy
Chris Balfour
Mike Best
Vassilis Kitidis
Christopher R. Pearce
E. Elena García-Martín
Source :
Global Biogeochemical Cycles
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Wiley, 2021.

Abstract

The flux of terrigenous organic carbon through estuaries is an important and changing, yet poorly understood, component of the global carbon cycle. Using dissolved organic carbon (DOC) and fluorescence data from 13 British estuaries draining catchments with highly variable land uses, we show that land use strongly influences the fate of DOC across the land ocean transition via its influence on the composition and lability of the constituent dissolved organic matter (DOM). In estuaries draining peatland-dominated catchments, DOC was highly correlated with biologically refractory “humic-like” terrigenous material which tended to be conservatively transported along the salinity gradient. In contrast, there was a weaker correlation between DOC and DOM components within estuaries draining catchments with a high degree of human impact, that is, relatively larger percentage of arable and (sub)urban land uses. These arable and (sub)urban estuaries contain a high fraction of bioavailable “protein-like” material that behaved nonconservatively, with both DOC removals and additions occurring. In general, estuaries draining catchments with a high percentage of peatland (≥18%) have higher area-specific estuarine exports of DOC (>13 g C m−2 yr−1) compared to those estuaries draining catchments with a high percentage (≥46%) of arable and (sub)urban land uses (

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Global Biogeochemical Cycles
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....ab08dfef2a461b1b5465edd141974e4e
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1029/2021GB007023