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Dissolved organic matter across terrestrial and aquatic systems : sources, chemistry and microbial processing

Hensgens, Geert LU (2020)
Abstract
The movement of DOM from terrestrial to aquatic systems is a globally significant flux affecting both carbon sequestration and CO2 emissions. Here, DOM dynamics were investigated in terrestrial and aquatic systems within the context of this carbon flux. The overall aim was to investigate the source and chemistry of DOM and determine how chemistry is affected by microbial processing of DOM.

In the boreal forest, understory vegetation produced more than 80 %, with the species V. myrtillus contributing more than 50 % of litter derived DOM at the forest stand level. Litter reactivity was linked to greater chemical changes in the DOM produced at different decay stages. High reactive species (V. myrtillus,... (More)
The movement of DOM from terrestrial to aquatic systems is a globally significant flux affecting both carbon sequestration and CO2 emissions. Here, DOM dynamics were investigated in terrestrial and aquatic systems within the context of this carbon flux. The overall aim was to investigate the source and chemistry of DOM and determine how chemistry is affected by microbial processing of DOM.

In the boreal forest, understory vegetation produced more than 80 %, with the species V. myrtillus contributing more than 50 % of litter derived DOM at the forest stand level. Litter reactivity was linked to greater chemical changes in the DOM produced at different decay stages. High reactive species (V. myrtillus, birch, alder) initially produced DOM with a higher lability rich in oxidized phenolic compounds, indicating lignin degradation of the source litter. As the DOM was microbially processed the similarity between litter species increased as oxygenated phenolic compounds from high reactive litter leachates were degraded and stable aliphatic secondary microbial compounds created.

Of the DOM extracted from podzols roughly a third consisted of aged (1000 yr) labile carbon as indicated by depleted 14C concentrations in Keeling plot intercepts. This fraction cannot be readily detected by bulk radiocarbon measurements without further incubation of the DOM. As such, the mobilization of aged carbon might have gone on undetected. This has important implications for e.g. predicting the future carbon balance of the boreal forest.

Severe drought resulted in strongly decreased CDOM concentrations of lakes as a result of hydrological disconnection. This effect was more pronounced in large lakes. During normal conditions, temperature was a positive driver of CDOM in lakes. Drought systematically weakened the regulation of CDOM by the surrounding area. Furthermore, microbial processing of DOM in lakes with little terrestrial influence show that CDOM is systematically microbially produced while at the same time DOM is degraded. The strength of CDOM production is dependent on CDOM concentrations in these lakes.

Combined these results highlight that future DOM regulation might change unexpectedly as temperatures rise, drought becomes more prevalent, understory vegetation composition changes and precipitation and runoff patterns will become more variable. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
author
supervisor
opponent
  • Professor Kalbitz, Karsten, Technische Universität Dresden, Tyskland
organization
publishing date
type
Thesis
publication status
published
subject
keywords
dissolved organic matter, carbon, leaching, decay, chemistry, terrestrial, aquatic
pages
73 pages
publisher
MediaTryck Lund
defense location
Pangea, Geocentrum, Lund Join via zoom: https://lu-se.zoom.us/j/62869983605?pwd=NytRUUVrRmVFeUZvTVkzYlVWSUpEdz09
defense date
2020-12-03 10:00:00
ISBN
978-91-89187-01-6
978-91-89187-02-3
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
a6608d51-44a4-4c7a-9ddc-d2ced31abbaa
date added to LUP
2020-11-09 21:30:26
date last changed
2021-07-20 15:15:13
@phdthesis{a6608d51-44a4-4c7a-9ddc-d2ced31abbaa,
  abstract     = {{The movement of DOM from terrestrial to aquatic systems is a globally significant flux affecting both carbon sequestration and CO<sub>2</sub> emissions. Here, DOM dynamics were investigated in terrestrial and aquatic systems within the context of this carbon flux. The overall aim was to investigate the source and chemistry of DOM and determine how chemistry is affected by microbial processing of DOM. <br/><br/>In the boreal forest, understory vegetation produced more than 80 %, with the species <i>V. myrtillus</i> contributing more than 50 % of litter derived DOM at the forest stand level. Litter reactivity was linked to greater chemical changes in the DOM produced at different decay stages. High reactive species (<i>V. myrtillus</i>, birch, alder) initially produced DOM with a higher lability rich in oxidized phenolic compounds, indicating lignin degradation of the source litter. As the DOM was microbially processed the similarity between litter species increased as oxygenated phenolic compounds from high reactive litter leachates were degraded and stable aliphatic secondary microbial compounds created. <br/><br/>Of the DOM extracted from podzols roughly a third consisted of aged (1000 yr) labile carbon as indicated by depleted <sup>14</sup>C concentrations in Keeling plot intercepts. This fraction cannot be readily detected by bulk radiocarbon measurements without further incubation of the DOM. As such, the mobilization of aged carbon might have gone on undetected. This has important implications for <i>e.g.</i> predicting the future carbon balance of the boreal forest. <br/><br/>Severe drought resulted in strongly decreased CDOM concentrations of lakes as a result of hydrological disconnection. This effect was more pronounced in large lakes. During normal conditions, temperature was a positive driver of CDOM in lakes. Drought systematically weakened the regulation of CDOM by the surrounding area. Furthermore, microbial processing of DOM in lakes with little terrestrial influence show that CDOM is systematically microbially produced while at the same time DOM is degraded. The strength of CDOM production is dependent on CDOM concentrations in these lakes. <br/><br/>Combined these results highlight that future DOM regulation might change unexpectedly as temperatures rise, drought becomes more prevalent, understory vegetation composition changes and precipitation and runoff patterns will become more variable.}},
  author       = {{Hensgens, Geert}},
  isbn         = {{978-91-89187-01-6}},
  keywords     = {{dissolved organic matter; carbon; leaching; decay; chemistry; terrestrial; aquatic}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  month        = {{10}},
  publisher    = {{MediaTryck Lund}},
  school       = {{Lund University}},
  title        = {{Dissolved organic matter across terrestrial and aquatic systems : sources, chemistry and microbial processing}},
  url          = {{https://lup.lub.lu.se/search/files/86533965/Geert_Hensgens_web.pdf}},
  year         = {{2020}},
}