QUANTITATIVE AND QUALITATIVE ASPECTS OF DISSOLVED ORGANIC CARBON LEACHED FROM SENESCENT PLANTS IN AN OLIGOTROPHIC WETLAND

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dc.contributor.author Maie N.
dc.contributor.author Jaffé R.
dc.contributor.author Miyoshi T.
dc.contributor.author Childers D.L.
dc.date.accessioned 2024-09-20T06:16:52Z
dc.date.available 2024-09-20T06:16:52Z
dc.date.issued 2006
dc.identifier https://www.elibrary.ru/item.asp?id=52864796
dc.identifier.citation Biogeochemistry, 2006, 78, 3, 285-314
dc.identifier.issn 0168-2563
dc.identifier.uri https://repository.geologyscience.ru/handle/123456789/45242
dc.description.abstract We conducted a series of experiments whereby dissolved organic matter (DOM) was leached from various wetland and estuarine plants, namely sawgrass (Cladium  jamaicense), spikerush (Eleocharis  cellulosa), red mangrove (Rhizophora  mangle), cattail (Typha  domingensis), periphyton (dry and wet mat), and a seagrass (turtle grass; Thalassia  testudinum). All are abundant in the Florida Coastal Everglades (FCE) except for cattail, but this species has a potential to proliferate in this environment. Senescent plant samples were immersed into ultrapure water with and without addition of 0.1% NaN3 (w/ and w/o NaN3, respectively) for 36 days. We replaced the water every 3 days. The amount of dissolved organic carbon (DOC), sugars, and phenols in the leachates were analyzed. The contribution of plant leachates to the ultrafiltered high molecular weight fraction of DOM (>1 kDa; UDOM) in natural waters in the FCE was also investigated. UDOM in plant leachates was obtained by tangential flow ultrafiltration and its carbon and phenolic compound compositions were analyzed using solid state 13C cross-polarization magic angle spinning nuclear magnetic resonance (13C CPMAS NMR) spectroscopy and thermochemolysis in the presence of tetramethylammonium hydroxide (TMAH thermochemolysis), respectively. The maximum yield of DOC leached from plants over the 36-day incubations ranged from 13.0 to 55.2 g C kg−1 dry weight. This amount was lower in w/o NaN3 treatments (more DOC was consumed by microbes than produced) except for periphyton. During the first 2 weeks of the 5 week incubation period, 60–85% of the total amount of DOC was leached, and exponential decay models fit the leaching rates except for periphyton w/o NaN3. Leached DOC (w/ NaN3) contained different concentrations of sugars and phenols depending on the plant types (1.09–7.22 and 0.38–12.4 g C kg−1 dry weight, respectively), and those biomolecules comprised 8–34% and 4–28% of the total DOC, respectively. This result shows that polyphenols that readily leach from senescent plants can be an important source of chromophoric DOM (CDOM) in wetland environments. The O-alkyl C was found to be the major C form (55±9%) of UDOM in plant leachates as determined by 13C CPMAS NMR. The relative abundance of alkyl C and carbonyl C was consistently lower in plant-leached UDOM than that in natural water UDOM in the FCE, which suggests that these constituents increase in relative abundance during diagenetic processing. TMAH thermochemolysis analysis revealed that the phenolic composition was different among the UDOM leached from different plants, and was expected to serve as a source indicator of UDOM in natural water. Polyphenols are, however, very reactive and photosensitive in aquatic environments, and thus may loose their plant-specific molecular characteristics shortly. Our study suggests that variations in vegetative cover across a wetland landscape will affect the quantity and quality of DOM leached into the water, and such differences in DOM characteristics may affect other biogeochemical processes.
dc.subject 13C CPMAS NMR
dc.subject DOC COMPOSITION
dc.subject EVERGLADES
dc.subject LEACHING
dc.subject TMAH THERMOCHEMOLYSIS
dc.subject VEGETATION
dc.subject WETLAND ECOSYSTEMS
dc.title QUANTITATIVE AND QUALITATIVE ASPECTS OF DISSOLVED ORGANIC CARBON LEACHED FROM SENESCENT PLANTS IN AN OLIGOTROPHIC WETLAND
dc.type Статья
dc.identifier.doi 10.1007/s10533-005-4329-6


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