Cargando…

Migration and transformation of dissolved carbon during accumulated cyanobacteria decomposition in shallow eutrophic lakes: a simulated microcosm study

The decomposition processes of accumulated cyanobacteria can release large amounts of organic carbon and affect the carbon cycling in shallow eutrophic lakes. However, the migration and transformation mechanisms of dissolved carbon (DC) require further study and discussion. In this study, a 73-day l...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Li, Zhichun, Zhao, Yanping, Xu, Xiaoguang, Han, Ruiming, Wang, Mingyue, Wang, Guoxiang
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: PeerJ Inc. 2018
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6228553/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30425899
http://dx.doi.org/10.7717/peerj.5922
_version_ 1783370031828041728
author Li, Zhichun
Zhao, Yanping
Xu, Xiaoguang
Han, Ruiming
Wang, Mingyue
Wang, Guoxiang
author_facet Li, Zhichun
Zhao, Yanping
Xu, Xiaoguang
Han, Ruiming
Wang, Mingyue
Wang, Guoxiang
author_sort Li, Zhichun
collection PubMed
description The decomposition processes of accumulated cyanobacteria can release large amounts of organic carbon and affect the carbon cycling in shallow eutrophic lakes. However, the migration and transformation mechanisms of dissolved carbon (DC) require further study and discussion. In this study, a 73-day laboratory microcosm experiment using suction samplers (Rhizon and syringe) was conducted to understand the migration and transformation of DC during the cyanobacteria decomposition. The decomposition of cyanobacteria biomass caused anoxic and reduction conditions, and changed the acid-base environment in the water column. During the early incubation (days 0–18), a large amount of cyanobacteria-derived particulate organic matter (POM) was decomposed into dissolved organic carbon (DOC) in the overlying water, reaching the highest peak value of 1.82 g L(−1) in the treatment added the high cyanobacteria biomass (470 g). After 18 days of incubation, the mineralization of increased DOC to dissolved inorganic carbon (DIC) maintained a high DIC level of overlying water in treatments added cyanobacteria biomass. The treatment added the medium cyanobacteria biomass (235 g) presented the lower DOC/total dissolved carbon ratio than the high cyanobacteria biomass associated with the lower mineralization from DOC to DIC. Due to the concentration differences of DIC at water-sediment interface, the main migration of DIC from pore water to overlying water occurred in the treatment without added cyanobacteria biomass. However, the treatments added the cyanobacteria biomass presented the obvious diffusion of DOC and the low migration of DIC at the water-sediment interface. The diffusive fluxes of DOC at the water-sediment interface increased with the cyanobacteria biomass added, reaching the maximum value of 411.01 mg/(m(2)·d) in the treatment added the high cyanobacteria biomass. In the overlying water, the group added the sediment and medium cyanobacteria biomass presented a faster degradation of cyanobacteria-derived POM to DOC and a higher mineralization level of DOC to DIC than added the medium cyanobacteria biomass without sediment. Therefore, during accumulated cyanobacteria decomposition, the biomass of accumulated cyanobacteria and sediment property can influence the migration and transformation of DC, playing an important role in carbon cycling in shallow eutrophic lakes.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-6228553
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2018
publisher PeerJ Inc.
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-62285532018-11-13 Migration and transformation of dissolved carbon during accumulated cyanobacteria decomposition in shallow eutrophic lakes: a simulated microcosm study Li, Zhichun Zhao, Yanping Xu, Xiaoguang Han, Ruiming Wang, Mingyue Wang, Guoxiang PeerJ Ecology The decomposition processes of accumulated cyanobacteria can release large amounts of organic carbon and affect the carbon cycling in shallow eutrophic lakes. However, the migration and transformation mechanisms of dissolved carbon (DC) require further study and discussion. In this study, a 73-day laboratory microcosm experiment using suction samplers (Rhizon and syringe) was conducted to understand the migration and transformation of DC during the cyanobacteria decomposition. The decomposition of cyanobacteria biomass caused anoxic and reduction conditions, and changed the acid-base environment in the water column. During the early incubation (days 0–18), a large amount of cyanobacteria-derived particulate organic matter (POM) was decomposed into dissolved organic carbon (DOC) in the overlying water, reaching the highest peak value of 1.82 g L(−1) in the treatment added the high cyanobacteria biomass (470 g). After 18 days of incubation, the mineralization of increased DOC to dissolved inorganic carbon (DIC) maintained a high DIC level of overlying water in treatments added cyanobacteria biomass. The treatment added the medium cyanobacteria biomass (235 g) presented the lower DOC/total dissolved carbon ratio than the high cyanobacteria biomass associated with the lower mineralization from DOC to DIC. Due to the concentration differences of DIC at water-sediment interface, the main migration of DIC from pore water to overlying water occurred in the treatment without added cyanobacteria biomass. However, the treatments added the cyanobacteria biomass presented the obvious diffusion of DOC and the low migration of DIC at the water-sediment interface. The diffusive fluxes of DOC at the water-sediment interface increased with the cyanobacteria biomass added, reaching the maximum value of 411.01 mg/(m(2)·d) in the treatment added the high cyanobacteria biomass. In the overlying water, the group added the sediment and medium cyanobacteria biomass presented a faster degradation of cyanobacteria-derived POM to DOC and a higher mineralization level of DOC to DIC than added the medium cyanobacteria biomass without sediment. Therefore, during accumulated cyanobacteria decomposition, the biomass of accumulated cyanobacteria and sediment property can influence the migration and transformation of DC, playing an important role in carbon cycling in shallow eutrophic lakes. PeerJ Inc. 2018-11-07 /pmc/articles/PMC6228553/ /pubmed/30425899 http://dx.doi.org/10.7717/peerj.5922 Text en © 2018 Li et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, reproduction and adaptation in any medium and for any purpose provided that it is properly attributed. For attribution, the original author(s), title, publication source (PeerJ) and either DOI or URL of the article must be cited.
spellingShingle Ecology
Li, Zhichun
Zhao, Yanping
Xu, Xiaoguang
Han, Ruiming
Wang, Mingyue
Wang, Guoxiang
Migration and transformation of dissolved carbon during accumulated cyanobacteria decomposition in shallow eutrophic lakes: a simulated microcosm study
title Migration and transformation of dissolved carbon during accumulated cyanobacteria decomposition in shallow eutrophic lakes: a simulated microcosm study
title_full Migration and transformation of dissolved carbon during accumulated cyanobacteria decomposition in shallow eutrophic lakes: a simulated microcosm study
title_fullStr Migration and transformation of dissolved carbon during accumulated cyanobacteria decomposition in shallow eutrophic lakes: a simulated microcosm study
title_full_unstemmed Migration and transformation of dissolved carbon during accumulated cyanobacteria decomposition in shallow eutrophic lakes: a simulated microcosm study
title_short Migration and transformation of dissolved carbon during accumulated cyanobacteria decomposition in shallow eutrophic lakes: a simulated microcosm study
title_sort migration and transformation of dissolved carbon during accumulated cyanobacteria decomposition in shallow eutrophic lakes: a simulated microcosm study
topic Ecology
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6228553/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30425899
http://dx.doi.org/10.7717/peerj.5922
work_keys_str_mv AT lizhichun migrationandtransformationofdissolvedcarbonduringaccumulatedcyanobacteriadecompositioninshalloweutrophiclakesasimulatedmicrocosmstudy
AT zhaoyanping migrationandtransformationofdissolvedcarbonduringaccumulatedcyanobacteriadecompositioninshalloweutrophiclakesasimulatedmicrocosmstudy
AT xuxiaoguang migrationandtransformationofdissolvedcarbonduringaccumulatedcyanobacteriadecompositioninshalloweutrophiclakesasimulatedmicrocosmstudy
AT hanruiming migrationandtransformationofdissolvedcarbonduringaccumulatedcyanobacteriadecompositioninshalloweutrophiclakesasimulatedmicrocosmstudy
AT wangmingyue migrationandtransformationofdissolvedcarbonduringaccumulatedcyanobacteriadecompositioninshalloweutrophiclakesasimulatedmicrocosmstudy
AT wangguoxiang migrationandtransformationofdissolvedcarbonduringaccumulatedcyanobacteriadecompositioninshalloweutrophiclakesasimulatedmicrocosmstudy