Title of article :
Organic matter and benthic metabolism in Lake Illawarra, Australia
Author/Authors :
Qu، نويسنده , , Wenchuan and Morrison، نويسنده , , R.J. and West، نويسنده , , R.J. and Su، نويسنده , , Chenwei، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2006
Abstract :
Carbon and nitrogen contents (total organic carbon and total nitrogen), chlorophyll-a concentrations in surface sediments and benthic sediment–water fluxes of oxygen and carbon dioxide were investigated at five stations in Lake Illawarra (Australia) to compare the sources/quality of sedimentary organic matter and the characteristics of diagenesis and benthic biogeochemical processes for different primary producers (e.g., seagrass, microphytobenthos and macroalgae) and/or sediment types (sand or mud).
vegetated sediments showed lower C/N ratios (with the lowest value occurring in the deep organic-rich muddy site) than the seagrass (Ruppia or Zostera) beds, which may be due to the contribution of microalgae (mainly diatoms) to the sedimentary organic matter pool. This was also supported by the detection of microalgal pigments in the bare sediments.
annual basis, seagrass beds exhibited the highest gross primary productivity (O2 or TCO2 fluxes), while the lowest rates occurred in the deep central basin of the Lake. Seasonally, there was a general trend of highest production in spring or summer, and lowest production in winter or autumn. Organic carbon oxidation scenarios, evaluated by either calcium carbonate dissolution or sulfate reduction models, indicated that both models can explain organic matter mineralization.
c status was evaluated using different indices including benthic trophic state index, net O2 fluxes and P/R ratios for Lake Illawarra, which led to similar trophic classifications in general, and also the same trends in spatial and seasonal variations. Overall, these data indicated that the Lake was heterotrophic on an annual basis, as the total community carbon respiration exceeded production, and this supported an earlier LOICZ mass balance/stoichiometric modelling conclusion.
Keywords :
sediments , Benthic metabolism , Organic matter , Diagenetic processes , Fluxes , Lake Illawarra
Journal title :
Continental Shelf Research
Journal title :
Continental Shelf Research