Author/Authors :
K.M. Chomicki?، نويسنده , , S.L Schiff، نويسنده ,
Abstract :
Oxygen (O2) is required for life in higher organisms, however, processes such as respiration,
the oxidation of reduced inorganic species, and the photolytic breakdown of dissolved
organic matter (DOM) decrease the O2 concentrations in aquatic systems. Filtered,
inoculated, and sterile samples of stream waters from Ontario, Canada, were incubated in
natural sunlight to examine the effects of photolysis of DOM, respiration, and abiotic
reactions on O2 consumption and δ18O of dissolved oxygen (δ18O–O2). Oxygen consumption
rates in the light were up to an order of magnitude greater than in the dark, suggesting lightmediated
processes controlled O2 consumption. Rates of O2 loss were the same for each
treatment (i.e. filtered, inoculated, and sterile) indicating that photolysis was the dominant
O2 consuming process over respiration in these incubations. O2 consumption rates were
different between streams, even when normalized to the change in dissolved organic carbon
(DOC), signifying that DOM photolability varied among streams. During DOM breakdown to
CO2, the lighter 16O isotopomer was preferentially consumed. Fractionation factors observed
for photolysis, respiration, and abiotic reactions ranged between 0.988 and 0.995, and were
similar in both the light and in the dark incubations in all streams. These fractionation
factors are not a function of O2 consumption rates, and are outside the range published for
respiration (0.975–0.982). In current models of O2 and δ18O–O2, photolysis and respiration are
not considered separately and the isotopic fractionation during respiration that is measured
in the dark is used in the light. In these incubations, DOM degradation and abiotic reactions
are important O2 consuming and δ18O–O2 fractionating processes. Current models of O2 and
δ18O–O2 incorporate photolysis of DOM and other abiotic processes into the respiratory
component of O2 consumption, thereby overestimating respiration and underestimating
photosynthesis to respiration ratios. Consequently, photolysis and abiotic reactions should
be considered separately, particularly in shallow aquatic systems with high DOC.