Factors controlling concentration, export, and decomposition of dissolved organic nutrients in the Everglades of Florida

被引:0
|
作者
Robert G. Qualls
Curtis J. Richardson
机构
[1] University of Nevada,Department of Environmental and Resource Sciences
[2] Duke University,Nicholas School of the Environment and Earth Sciences
来源
Biogeochemistry | 2003年 / 62卷
关键词
Adsorption; Biodegradation; Carbon; Decomposition; Dissolved organic matter; Everglades; Humic substances; Mineralization; Nitrogen; Nutrients; Peat; Phosphorus; Photochemical; Wetlands;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Water draining from the Everglades marshes of southern Florida containshigh concentrations of dissolved organic C (DOC), N (DON), and in somelocations, P (DOP). These dissolved organic nutrients carry over 90% of the Nand organic C, and about 25% of the P exported downstream in the Everglades.Ourobjectives were to describe the most important aspects of the origin and fateofdissolved organic matter (DOM) in the Everglades, and to describe the processescontrolling its concentration and export. Concentrations of dissolved organicnutrients are influenced by local plant production, decomposition, and sorptionequilibrium with peat. The drained peat soils of the Everglades AgriculturalArea and the more productive marshes of the northern Everglades produce some ofthe highest concentrations of DOC and DON in the Everglades watershed. Inportions of the marshes of the northern Everglades, P enrichment was correlatedwith higher local DOC and DON concentrations and greater production of solubleplant matter. Microbial degradation of Everglades DOM was very slow; less than10% of the DOC was lost after 6 months of incubation in the laboratory andsupplements of inorganic nutrients failed to speed the decomposition. Exposureto solar radiation increased the subsequent decay rate of the remaining DOC(25%in 6 mo.). Solar radiation alone mineralized 20.5% of the DOC, 7%of the DON, and degraded about 50% of the humic substances over 21 days insterile porewater samples and thus degraded DOM faster than microbialdegradation. The humic substances appeared to inhibit biodegradation of theother fractions of the DOC since hydrophilic organic acids decomposed fasterwhen isolated from the humic substances.The fate of DOC and DON is closely linked as indicated by a generally narrowrange of C/N ratios. In contrast, high concentrations of DOP were associatedwith P enrichment (at least in pore water). The DOC was composed of about 50%humic substances, 33% hydrophilic acids, and 15% hydrophilic neutralsubstances,typical of DOC from other environments, despite the fact that it originatesfroma neutral to slightly alkaline peatland. Despite high exports of DON (3.9g m−2 y−1 from one area), themarshes of the northern Everglades are a sink for DON on a landscape scale. Theagricultural fields of the Everglades Agricultural Area, however, exported netquantities of DON. High concentrations of DOC desorbed from the agriculturalsoils when water with no DOC was added. Sorption experiments indicated thathighconcentrations of dissolved organic matter flowing into the marshes from theEverglades Agricultural Area could suppress the further desorption ofadditionalsoluble organic matter through physicochemical mechanisms. While biologicalfactors, plant production and microbial decomposition are important inproducingpotentially soluble organic nutrients, physicochemical sorption equilibria,hydrology, and degradation by solar radiation are also likely to control theexport of this material on the landscape scale.
引用
收藏
页码:197 / 229
页数:32
相关论文
共 36 条
  • [31] Environmental factors associated with decomposition of organic materials and nutrients availability in the water and sediment of Setail River, Banyuwangi, Indonesia
    Perwira, I. Y.
    Ulinuha, D.
    Al Zamzami, I. M.
    Ahmad, F. H.
    Kifly, M. T. H.
    Wulandari, N.
    INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON SUSTAINABLE AQUATIC RESOURCES, 2020, 493
  • [32] Dissolved organic matter in relation to nutrients (N and P) and heavy metals in surface runoff water as affected by temporal variation and land uses - A case study from Indian River Area, south Florida, USA
    Yang, Yuangen
    He, Zhenli
    Wang, Yanbo
    Fan, Jinghua
    Liang, Zhanbei
    Stoffella, Peter J.
    AGRICULTURAL WATER MANAGEMENT, 2013, 118 : 38 - 49
  • [33] Factors controlling decomposition of soil organic matter in fallow systems of the high tropical Andes:: A field simulation approach using 14C- and 15N-labelled plant material
    Bottner, Pierre
    Pansu, Marc
    Sarmiento, Lina
    Herve, Dominique
    Callisaya-Bautista, Ruben
    Metselaar, Klaas
    SOIL BIOLOGY & BIOCHEMISTRY, 2006, 38 (08) : 2162 - 2177
  • [34] Estimation of chromophoric dissolved organic matter and its controlling factors in Beaufort Sea using mixture density network and Sentinel-3 data
    Huang, Jue
    Chen, Junjie
    Wu, Ming
    Gong, Lijiao
    Zhang, Xiang
    SCIENCE OF THE TOTAL ENVIRONMENT, 2022, 849
  • [35] Spatial and vertical variations in the soil organic carbon concentration and its controlling factors in boreal wetlands in the Greater Khingan Mountains, China
    Weidong Man
    Dehua Mao
    Zongming Wang
    Lin Li
    Mingyue Liu
    Mingming Jia
    Chunying Ren
    Igor Ogashawara
    Journal of Soils and Sediments, 2019, 19 : 1201 - 1214
  • [36] Divergent controlling factors of freeze-thaw-induced changes in dissolved organic carbon and microbial biomass carbon between topsoil and subsoil of cold alpine grasslands
    Deng, Yuanhong
    Li, Xiaoyan
    Shi, Fangzhong
    Zhang, Yangyang
    CATENA, 2024, 241