Title: P1252428438QgojZ
1Dissolved Particulate
Inorganic DIC CO2, H2CO3, HCO3-, CO32- CaCO3
Organic Diss. organic carbon (DOC) Large refractory compounds Small, reactive compounds Living organisms Dead particulate organic material
2Riverine Input
CO2
DOC
hn
POC
River, GW DIC
DIC
DOC
POC
Other Heterotrophs
Autotrophs
PIC
animals
Sediments
PIC
POC
3Lakes as Carbon Sources
Mirror Lake, NH
Direct measurements Autumn Spring/Summer/Fa
ll Summer Tropical lakes
Cole, 1994 1650 lakes 50 directly measured 1600
CO2 calculations
4DOC gtgt POC HMW DOC gt LMW DOC
Cotner, 2001
5Allocthonous Delivery of OC
- Terrestrial DOC HMW DOC
- Plant taxa, soil anoxia
- Nutrient-poor (High C/N, C/chl a)
6Internal Loading of DOC
- Secretion/decomposition major source of LMW,
nutrient rich DOC - Trophic state affects DOC, DOCPOC
- Rivers low DOCPOC
7POC Size reactivity effects
- Large POC colonized by microbes, fungi,
progressively decomposed to CO2, DOC - Terrestrial POC more recalcitrant than aquatic
POC,DOC
8DOC degradation
- Degradation rates of DOC
- Humic, fulvic phenolics, lignin long-lived
- Sugars short-lived
- Most sediments dominated by fine-grained POC and
terrestrial HMW compounds
9Photolysis
- Degradation of DOC by light (especially UV)
- Complete oxidation to CO2, Incomplete to
reactive LMW OC -
- Rapid, dependent on climate, latitude, ozone
- Rates typically low (10-20 of DOC metabolism),
but important for recalcitrant OC
10Detrital Chain Or Microbial Loop
Grazer Chain
- Most respiration occurs in microbial loop
- Microbe/algal competition for nutrients
11(No Transcript)
12Biomass
Net Ecosystem Autotrophy vs. Heterotrophy
2
English channel
(g/m
)
Herbivores
21
Herbivores
Plants
4
PP
The inverted pyramid
13- High bacterial growth efficiency in eutrophic
lakes - Bacterial dominance of oligotrophic lakes
- Bacterial/algal competition for N, P
- Net ecosystem heterotrophy vs. autotrophy
BGE bacterial growth efficiency BR bacterial
respiration PR plankton respiration
Biddanda, B.et al. 2001
14mgC/m2 or mgC/m2/day
15Buildup of CO2 in Hypolimnia
- Microbial respiration of DOC/POC
16 17Rates of methanogenesis
18Conclusions
- Lakes receive large inputs of recalcitrant DOC
and POC from land - Watershed vegetation, soils, and climate
influence the type, quality, and quantity of
terrigenous OC - Autochthonous OC inputs largely a function of
lake trophic state - Bacteria metabolize aquatic and terrestrial DOC
and POC as part of microbial loop, - Photolysis further degrades DOC
- Most OM decomposition is in the sediments where
methanogenesis is a very important process of OM
decomposition