Author:
Aldrich Annette P.,van den Berg Constant M. G.,Thies Hansjörg,Nickus Ulrike
Abstract
The redox speciation of iron was determined by voltammetry in two lakes
(Blelham Tarn, a lowland lake, and Gossenköllesee (GKS), a mountain
lake). The reactive iron (FeR) concentration was ~40 nM
in the epilimnion of Blelham Tarn, and up to 37% of this occurred as
iron(II). In contrast, the FeR concentration in GKS was
much lower at ~1 nM, similar to concentrations found in the open ocean. Under
ice cover the iron(II) concentration peaked in GKS just below the
Chl-a maximum, amounting to 50% of
FeR. In July, the Chl-a
concentration was lower, and iron(II) was present throughout the water column
at ~30% of FeR. This work has demonstrated that
iron occurs to a large extent as iron(II) in lake waters, of greatly differing
conditions, in spite of the presence of oxygen; the main cause for this is not
clear because the iron(II) may have been produced biologically or
photochemically (or both). This, and the unexpectedly low reactive-iron
concentrations in the transparent mountain-lake waters, warrant further work
to evaluate their importance to the microorganisms in the lakes.
Subject
Ecology,Aquatic Science,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics,Oceanography
Cited by
15 articles.
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