| Literature DB >> 31525918 |
Yongqiang Zhou1,2, Lei Zhou1,2, Xiaoting He3, Kyoung-Soon Jang4, Xiaolong Yao1,2, Yang Hu1,2, Yunlin Zhang1,2, Xiangying Li5, Robert G M Spencer6, Justin D Brookes7, Erik Jeppesen8,9.
Abstract
Globally, alpine glaciers hold a large quantity of dissolved organic matter (DOM) and are headwaters of numerous rivers supporting downstream heterotrophic metabolism. However, it remains unclear how glacial coverage and distance from the glacial terminus affect the fate of DOM. Here, we elucidate DOM variability in glacial-fed streams on the Tibetan Plateau using field sampling and bioincubation experiments and compare our findings with the existing literature. We found that dissolved organic carbon, DOM absorption a(254), DOM aromaticity, and the relative abundance of lignin compounds in glacial-fed streams and rivers all increased with increasing distance from the glacial terminus and with decreasing glacial coverage. We also found that contribution of protein-like components, the relative abundance of aliphatic compounds, and DOM biolability increased with increasing glacial coverage and with decreasing distance from the glacial terminus. The ratio of glacial coverage to the logarithmic transformed distance from the glacial terminus was better than that of actual glacial coverage and distance from the glacial terminus in tracing the variability of glacial-fed stream DOM. Microbes in surface ice can produce biolabile DOM that is exported downstream with meltwater. This glacial-fed stream and river DOM is an important source of the highly bioavailable material fueling downstream heterotrophic activity.Entities:
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Year: 2019 PMID: 31525918 DOI: 10.1021/acs.est.9b03348
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Environ Sci Technol ISSN: 0013-936X Impact factor: 9.028