4.8 Article

Diurnal variations of dissolved and colloidal organic carbon and trace metals in a boreal lake during summer bloom

Journal

WATER RESEARCH
Volume 47, Issue 2, Pages 922-932

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.watres.2012.11.017

Keywords

Trace metals; Bloom; Cyanobacteria; Adsorption; Boreal; Lake; Climate; Warming

Funding

  1. ANR Arctic metals
  2. RFFI grant Sever
  3. State Contract IEPS UroRAN
  4. PICS [6063]
  5. LEAGE European Associated Laboratory

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This work describes variation of element concentration in surface water of a subarctic organic-rich lake during the diurnal cycle of photosynthesis. An unusually hot summer 2010 in European part of subarctic Russia produced elevated surface water temperature (28 -30 degrees C) and caused massive cyanobacterial bloom. Diurnal variation of similar to 40 dissolved macro and trace elements and organic carbon were recorded in the humic Lake Svyatoe in the White Sea drainage basin. Two days continuous measurements with 3 h sampling steps at the surface (0.5 m) allowed tracing cyanobacterial activity via pH and O-2 measurement and revealed constant concentrations (within +/- 20-30%) of all major elements (Na, Mg, Cl, SO4, K, Ca), organic and inorganic carbon and most trace elements (Li, B, Sc, Ti, Ni, Cu, Ga, As, Rb, Sr, Y, Zr, Mo, Sb, medium and heavy REEs, Hf, Pb, Th, U). The concentration of Mn demonstrated a factor of 3 decrease during the day following Mn adsorption onto cyanobacterial cells due to similar to 1 pH unit raise during the photosynthesis and Mn release during the night due to desorption from the cell surface. The role of Mn(II) photo-oxidation by reactive oxygen species could be also pronounced, although its contribution to Mn diurnal variation was much smaller than the adsorption at the cell surfaces. Similar pattern, but with much lesser variations (c.a., 10-20%), was recorded for Ba and Fe. On-site ultrafiltration technique allowed to distinguish between low molecular weight (LMW) complexes (<1 kDa) and high molecular weight (HMW) colloids (1 kDa -0.22 mu m) and to assess their diurnal pattern. Colloidal Al and Fe were the highest during the night, when the contribution of HMW allochthonous colloids was maximal. Typical insoluble trivalent and tetravalent elements exhibited constant complexation (>80-90%) with HMW allochthonous organics, independent on the diel photosynthetic cycle. Finally, biologically-relevant metals (Cu, Co, Cr, V, and Ni) demonstrated significant variations of colloidal fractions (from 10 to 60%) not directly related to the photosynthesis. The majority of possible metal nutrients, being strongly associated with organic and organo-mineral colloids do not exhibit any measurable concentration variation during photosynthesis. The two types of element behavior during cyanobacterial bloom in the water column constant concentration and sinusoidal variations - likely depend on element speciation in solution and their relative affinity to surfaces of aquatic microorganisms and complexation with authochthonous and allochthonous organic matter. (C) 2012 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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