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https://repositorio.inpa.gov.br/handle/1/16890
Title: | Influence of plankton metabolism and mixing depth on CO2 dynamics in an Amazon floodplain lake |
Authors: | Amaral, João Henrique Fernandes Borges, Alberto V. Melack, John M. Sarmento, Hugo Barbosa, Pedro Maia Kasper, Daniele Melo, Michaela Ladeira de Fex-Wolf, Daniela de Silva, Jonismar S. da Forsberg, Bruce Rider |
Keywords: | Air Banks (bodies Of Water) Biochemical Oxygen Demand Carbon Dissolved Oxygen Drought Floods Lakes Metabolism Physiology Plankton Plants (botany) Sediments Amazon River Community Respiration Dissolved Oxygen Concentrations Flood-plains Gross Primary Production Herbaceous Vegetation Phytoplankton Abundances Plankton Metabolism Carbon Dioxide Carbon Dioxide Chlorophyll A Dissolved Oxygen Carbon Dioxide Carbon Emission Concentration (composition) Dissolved Oxygen Floodplain Lake Water Metabolism Plankton Primary Production Respiration Atmosphere Carbon Dioxide Tension Carbon Footprint Community Respiration Concentration (parameters) Controlled Study Drought Floodplain Gross Primary Production Lake Macrophyte Metabolism Net Planktonic Community Production Nonhuman Optical Sensor Photosynthesis Phytoplankton Plant Growth Population Abundance Priority Journal Sediment Temperature Vegetation Wind Amazon River |
Issue Date: | 2018 |
metadata.dc.publisher.journal: | Science of the Total Environment |
metadata.dc.relation.ispartof: | Volume 630, Pags. 1381-1393 |
Abstract: | We investigated plankton metabolism and its influence on carbon dioxide (CO2) dynamics in a central Amazon floodplain lake (Janauacá 3°23′ S, 60°18′ W) from September 2015 to May 2016, including a period with exceptional drought. We made diel measurements of CO2 emissions to the atmosphere with floating chambers and depth profiles of temperature and CO2 partial pressure (pCO2) at two sites with differing wind exposure and proximity to vegetated habitats. Dissolved oxygen (DO) concentrations were monitored continuously during day and night in clear and dark chambers with autonomous optical sensors to evaluate plankton metabolism. Overnight community respiration (CR), and gross primary production (GPP) rates were higher in clear chambers and positively correlated with chlorophyll-a (Chl-a). CO2 air-water fluxes varied over 24-h periods with changes in thermal structure and metabolism. Most net daily CO2 fluxes during low water and mid-rising water at the wind exposed site were into the lake as a result of high rates of photosynthesis. All other measurements indicated net daily release to the atmosphere. Average GPP rates (6.8 gC m−2 d−1) were high compared with other studies in Amazon floodplain lakes. The growth of herbaceous plants on exposed sediment during an exceptional drought led to large carbon inputs when these areas were flooded, enhancing CR, pCO2, and CO2 fluxes. During the period when the submerged herbaceous vegetation decayed phytoplankton abundance increased and photosynthetic uptake of CO2 occurred. While planktonic metabolism was often autotrophic (GPP:CR > 1), CO2 out-gassing occurred during most periods investigated indicating other inputs of carbon such as sediments or soils and wetland plants. © 2018 Elsevier B.V. |
metadata.dc.identifier.doi: | 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2018.02.331 |
Appears in Collections: | Artigos |
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