scholarly journals Trophic upgrading via the microbial food web may link terrestrial dissolved organic matter to Daphnia

2017 ◽  
Vol 39 (6) ◽  
pp. 861-869 ◽  
Author(s):  
Minna Hiltunen ◽  
Milja Honkanen ◽  
Sami Taipale ◽  
Ursula Strandberg ◽  
Paula Kankaala
1998 ◽  
Vol 37 (2) ◽  
pp. 105-112 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. Hejzlar ◽  
P. Dolejš ◽  
J. Komárková ◽  
J. Sed′a ◽  
K. Šimek ◽  
...  

The impact of planktivorous fish on the plankton community structure and character of aquatic organic matter was studied by a meso-scale enclosure experiment in a stratified reservoir. Aims of the study were (i) to examine the response of the communities with and without herbivorous zooplankton to an increased input of phosphorus and (ii) to determine the composition and coagulation properties of the organic matter produced by these communities. The concentration and composition of organic matter were affected both in the enclosure with planktivorous fish (F), where high algal biomass developed, and in the enclosure without fish (Z), where algae were maintained at a low concentration by zooplankton grazing. Although differences between the enclosures in concentrations of total dissolved organic matter and its hydrophobic, hydrophilic and neutral/basic fractions were relatively small, coagulation properties of the organics differed substantially. Particulate and dissolved organic matter produced in enclosure F had a positive effect on the efficiency of alum coagulation in contrast to the less readily separable organics produced in enclosure Z. The results indicate that pelagic food web manipulations to maintainin low phytoplankton biomass by zooplankton grazing may not always have positive effects on the treatability of water by coagulation.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
David Brankovits ◽  
John Pohlman ◽  
Mark Garnett ◽  
Joshua Dean

<p>Biogeochemical processing of dissolved organic matter, including methane, along sharp salinity gradients in subterranean estuaries greatly alters the composition of submarine groundwater discharge into the marine environment. Along the margins of coastal carbonate (karst) platforms, which account for ~25% of all coastlines, subterranean estuaries extend kilometers inland within porous bedrock, flooding extensive cave networks. This environment harbors a poorly understood, but globally dispersed, anchialine fauna (invertebrates with subterranean adaptations) and characteristic microbial communities. In Mexico’s Yucatan Peninsula, microbial processing of methane and dissolved organic carbon (DOC), originating from overlying tropical soils, is the critical link for shuttling organic matter to higher trophic levels of the food web within the coastal aquifer. To better understand carbon turnover during organic matter transformations in this habitat, we collected samples for stable and radiocarbon analyses targeting the biotic and abiotic components of the carbon cycle. In the freshwater, radiocarbon signatures of terrestrially originated DOC (pMC = 105.1; [DOC] = 517 µM; δ<sup>13</sup>C = ˗27.8 ‰) and methane (pMC = 101.6; [CH<sub>4</sub>] = 6460 nM; δ<sup>13</sup>C = ˗71.5 ‰) correspond with modern <sup>14</sup>C ages, suggesting these sources of energy within the habitat are comprised of modern carbon fixed recently by photosynthesizing primary producers at the land surface. By contrast, DOC in the deeper saline groundwater is significantly lower in concentration (21 µM), and substantially older (pMC = 47.3, equates to 6010 ± 95 <sup>14</sup>C yrs). Similarly, dissolved inorganic carbon (DIC) in the freshwater is significantly younger (pMC = 86.5, equates to 1170 ± 15 <sup>14</sup>C yrs) than in the deeper saline water (pMC = 58.4, equates to 4320 ± 25 <sup>14</sup>C yrs). These findings demonstrate that important sources of nutrition for the food web are intimately linked to the overlying subaerial habitat, which suggests these ecosystems are highly vulnerable to nearby land use alterations. Furthermore, this study provides new insights into carbon turnover during the process of methane production/consumption, carbon exchange, and organic matter transformation before the emission of the dissolved constituents into coastal oceans from karst subterranean estuaries. Radiocarbon and stable isotopic analyses of the resident fauna will allow us to evaluate the ecological effects of the rapid top-down transfer mechanism for methane and DOC. Beyond better understanding the sources and fate of these carbon sources, our findings have the potential to support management and conservation efforts aimed at coastal groundwater ecosystems.</p>


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