Organic matter transformations are disconnected between surface water and the hyporheic zone
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Published:2022-07-01
Issue:12
Volume:19
Page:3099-3110
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ISSN:1726-4189
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Container-title:Biogeosciences
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language:en
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Short-container-title:Biogeosciences
Author:
Stegen James C.ORCID, Fansler Sarah J., Tfaily Malak M., Garayburu-Caruso Vanessa A., Goldman Amy E.ORCID, Danczak Robert E., Chu Rosalie K., Renteria Lupita, Tagestad Jerry, Toyoda Jason
Abstract
Abstract. Biochemical transformations of organic matter (OM) are a primary driver of river corridor biogeochemistry, thereby modulating ecosystem processes at
local to global scales. OM transformations are driven by diverse biotic and abiotic processes, but we lack knowledge of how the diversity of those
processes varies across river corridors and across surface and subsurface components of river corridors. To fill this gap we quantified the number
of putative biotic and abiotic transformations of organic molecules across diverse river corridors using ultra-high-resolution mass
spectrometry. The number of unique transformations is used here as a proxy for the diversity of biochemical processes underlying observed profiles
of organic molecules. For this, we use public data spanning the contiguous United States (ConUS) from the Worldwide Hydrobiogeochemical Observation
Network for Dynamic River Systems (WHONDRS) consortium. Our results show that surface water OM had more biotic and abiotic transformations than OM
from shallow hyporheic zone sediments (1–3 cm depth). We observed substantially more biotic than abiotic transformations, and the numbers of biotic
and abiotic transformations were highly correlated with each other. We found no relationship between the number of transformations in surface water
and sediments and no meaningful relationships with latitude, longitude, or climate. We also found that the composition of transformations in
sediments was not linked with transformation composition in adjacent surface waters. We infer that OM transformations represented in surface water
are an integrated signal of diverse processes occurring throughout the upstream catchment. In contrast, OM transformations in sediments likely
reflect a narrower range of processes within the sampled volume. This indicates decoupling between the processes influencing surface water and
sediment OM, despite the potential for hydrologic exchange to homogenize OM. We infer that the processes influencing OM transformations and the
scales at which they operate diverge between surface water and sediments.
Funder
U.S. Department of Energy
Publisher
Copernicus GmbH
Subject
Earth-Surface Processes,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics
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