Organic carbon fluxes in a boreal catchment : spatial study of bioavailability and importance of the riparian zone

Organic carbon as an important water quality factor was investigated in 13 riparian zones (RZs) and 14 stream sites in the 67 km2 boreal Krycklan catchment in Northern Sweden during 2008 to 2009. For comparisons of up- and downslope locations, also three sites with different distances to the stream...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autor principal: Maehder, Sonja
Formato: H2
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: SLU/Dept. of Aquatic Sciences and Assessment 2012
Materias:
_version_ 1855570745786105856
author Maehder, Sonja
author_browse Maehder, Sonja
author_facet Maehder, Sonja
author_sort Maehder, Sonja
collection Epsilon Archive for Student Projects
description Organic carbon as an important water quality factor was investigated in 13 riparian zones (RZs) and 14 stream sites in the 67 km2 boreal Krycklan catchment in Northern Sweden during 2008 to 2009. For comparisons of up- and downslope locations, also three sites with different distances to the stream were analysed. The RZs are characterized by various hydro-morphological soils while stream sites differed in land use type. The study aimed at clarifying connections between riparian and stream water focussing on spatial variability of the bioavailability of total organic carbon (TOC) in RZs and streams. Objectives were to test whether the hydrochemical signal of stream TOC character is created in the RZ or in upslope locations, and analyse the spatial and temporal variability of TOC in soil and stream water as well as at up- and downstream locations all over the catchment area. Investigations were based on TOC concentration and exports as well as the biologically-relevant indices absorbance ratio A254/A365 and specific ultraviolet absorbance (SUVA254) index. In direct comparison, riparian soils and (first-order) streams agreed better in biological indices than TOC exports with the latter varying more than related A254/A365 and SUVA254. The ranges of organic carbon concentrations were quite similar in streams and riparian soils. The biological indices were mainly consistent. High A254/A365 and low SUVA254 values both indicated good bacterial growth and bioavailability of TOC. Volume-weighted bio-logical indices matched well comparing RZs and streams -independently of soil type classification or related land use type-, indicating exports of similar carbon character with almost the same aromaticity and expected bioavailability from both locations. This again emphasizes the hypothesis of RZs as playing a key role in determining the chemical status of streams. At the whole-catchment-scale, up- and downstream locations showed similar decreasing TOC export tendencies in downstream direction with higher temporal and spatial variability in RZs and the same carbon bioavailability by volume-weighted A254/A365. The volume-weighted SUVA, however, did not give such a clear picture. In conclusion, biological indices were useful in characterizing and assessing bioavailability of organic carbon between different locations; but research questions remained.
format H2
id RepoSLU4815
institution Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences
language Inglés
publishDate 2012
publishDateSort 2012
publisher SLU/Dept. of Aquatic Sciences and Assessment
publisherStr SLU/Dept. of Aquatic Sciences and Assessment
record_format eprints
spelling RepoSLU48152012-09-24T07:04:47Z Organic carbon fluxes in a boreal catchment : spatial study of bioavailability and importance of the riparian zone Maehder, Sonja Total organic carbon TOC Dissolved organic carbon DOC absorbance ratio SUVA riparian zone RZ boreal catchment RIM Krycklan bioavailability Organic carbon as an important water quality factor was investigated in 13 riparian zones (RZs) and 14 stream sites in the 67 km2 boreal Krycklan catchment in Northern Sweden during 2008 to 2009. For comparisons of up- and downslope locations, also three sites with different distances to the stream were analysed. The RZs are characterized by various hydro-morphological soils while stream sites differed in land use type. The study aimed at clarifying connections between riparian and stream water focussing on spatial variability of the bioavailability of total organic carbon (TOC) in RZs and streams. Objectives were to test whether the hydrochemical signal of stream TOC character is created in the RZ or in upslope locations, and analyse the spatial and temporal variability of TOC in soil and stream water as well as at up- and downstream locations all over the catchment area. Investigations were based on TOC concentration and exports as well as the biologically-relevant indices absorbance ratio A254/A365 and specific ultraviolet absorbance (SUVA254) index. In direct comparison, riparian soils and (first-order) streams agreed better in biological indices than TOC exports with the latter varying more than related A254/A365 and SUVA254. The ranges of organic carbon concentrations were quite similar in streams and riparian soils. The biological indices were mainly consistent. High A254/A365 and low SUVA254 values both indicated good bacterial growth and bioavailability of TOC. Volume-weighted bio-logical indices matched well comparing RZs and streams -independently of soil type classification or related land use type-, indicating exports of similar carbon character with almost the same aromaticity and expected bioavailability from both locations. This again emphasizes the hypothesis of RZs as playing a key role in determining the chemical status of streams. At the whole-catchment-scale, up- and downstream locations showed similar decreasing TOC export tendencies in downstream direction with higher temporal and spatial variability in RZs and the same carbon bioavailability by volume-weighted A254/A365. The volume-weighted SUVA, however, did not give such a clear picture. In conclusion, biological indices were useful in characterizing and assessing bioavailability of organic carbon between different locations; but research questions remained. SLU/Dept. of Aquatic Sciences and Assessment 2012 H2 eng https://stud.epsilon.slu.se/4815/
spellingShingle Total organic carbon TOC
Dissolved organic carbon DOC
absorbance ratio
SUVA
riparian zone RZ
boreal catchment
RIM
Krycklan
bioavailability
Maehder, Sonja
Organic carbon fluxes in a boreal catchment : spatial study of bioavailability and importance of the riparian zone
title Organic carbon fluxes in a boreal catchment : spatial study of bioavailability and importance of the riparian zone
title_full Organic carbon fluxes in a boreal catchment : spatial study of bioavailability and importance of the riparian zone
title_fullStr Organic carbon fluxes in a boreal catchment : spatial study of bioavailability and importance of the riparian zone
title_full_unstemmed Organic carbon fluxes in a boreal catchment : spatial study of bioavailability and importance of the riparian zone
title_short Organic carbon fluxes in a boreal catchment : spatial study of bioavailability and importance of the riparian zone
title_sort organic carbon fluxes in a boreal catchment : spatial study of bioavailability and importance of the riparian zone
topic Total organic carbon TOC
Dissolved organic carbon DOC
absorbance ratio
SUVA
riparian zone RZ
boreal catchment
RIM
Krycklan
bioavailability