The karstic Krka River is characterized by having lower dissolved organic carbon (DOC) concentrations (~30 ?M) than coastal seawater (~60 ?M). This peculiarity, together with the pristine nature of this area, makes the Krka River estuary a natural laboratory where it is possible to discriminate among the different dissolved organic matter (DOM) sources (riverine, marine and produced in-situ) and to study the main processes of DOM production and removal. The hypothesis behind this work is that in winter, due to the high discharge of the river, most of the DOM has a terrestrial signature, whereas in summer autochthonous DOM compose the main fraction of the DOM pool because of the reduced discharge, the high temperature and primary production. Our data shows that DOM in the river mainly consists of terrestrial molecules, as suggested by the high chromophoric content and low spectral slope (S275-295) values, as well by the predominance of humic-like substances. DOM in the seawater features the concentration and optical properties of the "typical" marine DOM from open sea waters. In summer, low riverine discharge and high temperature promote the intense biological activity, with an increase in DOC concentrations of up to 148 ?M, resulting in a non-conservative behavior of DOM in the estuary. The high stratification combined with a decoupling between production and removal processes can explain the observed DOM accumulation. In the bottom layer DOM was released and quickly removed when oxygen was available, whereas in hypoxic waters the production of DOC, chromophoric DOM (CDOM) and fluorescent DOM (FDOM) was linearly related to oxygen consumption. Our work highlights the need of further studies combining chemical and biological information in order to gain new insights into the main processes responsible for DOM dynamics in this system.

Dissolved organic matter dynamics in the pristine Krka River estuary (Croatia)

Santinelli C;Evangelista V;Gonnelli M;
2020

Abstract

The karstic Krka River is characterized by having lower dissolved organic carbon (DOC) concentrations (~30 ?M) than coastal seawater (~60 ?M). This peculiarity, together with the pristine nature of this area, makes the Krka River estuary a natural laboratory where it is possible to discriminate among the different dissolved organic matter (DOM) sources (riverine, marine and produced in-situ) and to study the main processes of DOM production and removal. The hypothesis behind this work is that in winter, due to the high discharge of the river, most of the DOM has a terrestrial signature, whereas in summer autochthonous DOM compose the main fraction of the DOM pool because of the reduced discharge, the high temperature and primary production. Our data shows that DOM in the river mainly consists of terrestrial molecules, as suggested by the high chromophoric content and low spectral slope (S275-295) values, as well by the predominance of humic-like substances. DOM in the seawater features the concentration and optical properties of the "typical" marine DOM from open sea waters. In summer, low riverine discharge and high temperature promote the intense biological activity, with an increase in DOC concentrations of up to 148 ?M, resulting in a non-conservative behavior of DOM in the estuary. The high stratification combined with a decoupling between production and removal processes can explain the observed DOM accumulation. In the bottom layer DOM was released and quickly removed when oxygen was available, whereas in hypoxic waters the production of DOC, chromophoric DOM (CDOM) and fluorescent DOM (FDOM) was linearly related to oxygen consumption. Our work highlights the need of further studies combining chemical and biological information in order to gain new insights into the main processes responsible for DOM dynamics in this system.
2020
Istituto di Biofisica - IBF
concentration (composition)
discharge
dis
high temperature
hypoxic conditions
oxygen
performance assessment
river
seawater
stratification
Croatia
Krka River [Croatia
File in questo prodotto:
Non ci sono file associati a questo prodotto.

I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.

Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14243/415452
Citazioni
  • ???jsp.display-item.citation.pmc??? ND
  • Scopus 15
  • ???jsp.display-item.citation.isi??? ND
social impact