14C as a tool to trace terrestrial carbon in a complex lake system: implications for food-web structure and carbon cycling


Autoria(s): Keaveney, Evelyn; Reimer, Paula; Foy, Robert
Data(s)

01/04/2013

Resumo

<p>Globally lakes bury and remineralise significant quantities of terrestrial C, and the associated flux of terrestrial C strongly influences their functioning. Changing deposition chemistry, land use and climate induced impacts on hydrology will affect soil biogeochemistry and terrestrial C export<sup>1</sup> and hence lake ecology with potential feedbacks for regional and global C cycling. C and nitrogen stable isotope analysis (SIA) has identified the terrestrial subsidy of freshwater food webs. The approach relies on different <sup>13</sup>C fractionation in aquatic and terrestrial primary producers, but also that inorganic C demands of aquatic primary producers are partly met by <sup>13</sup>C depleted C from respiration of terrestrial C, and ‘old’ C derived from weathering of catchment geology. SIA thus fails to differentiate between the contributions of old and recently fixed terrestrial C. Natural abundance <sup>14</sup>C can be used as an additional biomarker to untangle riverine food webs<sup>2</sup> where aquatic and terrestrial δ <sup>13</sup>C overlap, but may also be valuable for examining the age and origin of C in the lake. Primary production in lakes is based on dissolved inorganic C (DIC). DIC in alkaline lakes is partially derived from weathering of carbonaceous bedrock, a proportion of which is<sup>14</sup>C-free. The low <sup>14</sup>C activity yields an artificial age offset leading samples to appear hundreds to thousands of years older than their actual age. As such, <sup>14</sup>C can be used to identify the proportion of autochthonous C in the food-web. With terrestrial C inputs likely to increase, the origin and utilisation of ‘fossil’ or ‘recent’ allochthonous C in the food-web can also be determined. Stable isotopes and 14C were measured for biota, particulate organic matter (POM), DIC and dissolved organic carbon (DOC) from Lough Erne, Northern Ireland, a humic alkaline lake. Temporal and spatial variation was evident in DIC, DOC and POM C isotopes with implications for the fluctuation in terrestrial export processes. Ramped pyrolysis of lake surface sediment indicates the burial of two C components. <sup>14</sup>C activity (507 ± 30 BP) of sediment combusted at 400˚C was consistent with algal values and younger than bulk sediment values (1097 ± 30 BP). The sample was subsequently combusted at 850˚C, yielding 14C values (1471 ± 30 BP) older than the bulk sediment age, suggesting that fossil terrestrial carbon is also buried in the sediment. Stable isotopes in the food web indicate that terrestrial organic C is also utilised by lake organisms. High winter δ <sup>15</sup>N values in calanoid zooplankton (δ <sup>15</sup>N = 24%¸) relative to phytoplankton and POM (δ <sup>15</sup>N = 6h and 12h respectively) may reflect several microbial trophic levels between terrestrial C and calanoids. Furthermore winter calanoid 14C ages are consistent with DOC from an inflowing river (75 ± 24 BP), not phytoplankton (367 ± 70 BP). Summer calanoid δ <sup>13C</sup>, δ <sup>15</sup>N and <sup>14</sup>C (345 ± 80 BP) indicate greater reliance on phytoplankton. </p><p><sup>1</sup> Monteith, D.T et al., (2007) Dissolved organic carbon trends resulting from changes in atmospheric deposition chemistry. Nature, 450:537-535 </p><p><sup>2</sup> Caraco, N., et al.,(2010) Millennial-aged organic carbon subsidies to a modern river food web. Ecology,91: 2385-2393.</p>

Identificador

http://pure.qub.ac.uk/portal/en/publications/14c-as-a-tool-to-trace-terrestrial-carbon-in-a-complex-lake-system-implications-for-foodweb-structure-and-carbon-cycling(cf6e34d9-d6c9-4d0e-90bf-8bb8e7ecf92a).html

Idioma(s)

eng

Direitos

info:eu-repo/semantics/restrictedAccess

Fonte

Keaveney , E , Reimer , P & Foy , R 2013 , ' 14C as a tool to trace terrestrial carbon in a complex lake system: implications for food-web structure and carbon cycling ' .

Tipo

conferenceObject