4.6 Article

Seasonal Variations of Dissolved Organic Matter by Fluorescent Analysis in a Typical River Catchment in Northern China

Journal

WATER
Volume 13, Issue 4, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/w13040494

Keywords

dissolved organic matter; Duliujian River catchment; land use; optical properties; seasonal distributions and traceability

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation China [41373138]
  2. Tianjin Normal University, China [5KGCC18002]
  3. Postgraduate and doctoral Innovation Project of Tianjin [2019YJSS123]

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Fluorescence spectroscopy and PARAFAC modeling were used to study the sources, distribution, and transformation of dissolved organic matter (DOM) in the Duliujian River catchment, identifying four main fluorescent components. Results showed higher dissolved organic carbon and chromophoric dissolved organic matter in summer compared to other seasons, suggesting a significant impact of rainfall events on the input of terrestrial-derived DOM.
Fluorescence (excitation-emission matrices, EEMs) spectroscopy coupled with PARAFAC (parallel factor) modelling and UV-Vis (ultraviolet visible) spectra were used to ascertain the sources, distribution and biogeochemical transformation of dissolved organic matter (DOM) in the Duliujian River catchment. Dissolved organic carbon (DOC), chromophoric dissolved organic matter (a(335)) (CDOM), and hydrophobic components (a(260)) were higher in summer than in other seasons with 53.3 m(-1), while aromaticity (SUVA(254)) was higher in spring. Four fluorescent components, namely terrestrial humic acid (HA)-like (A/C), terrestrial fulvic acid (FA)-like (A/M), autochthonous fulvic acid (FA)-like (A/M), and protein-like substances (Tuv/T), were identified using EEM-PARAFAC modelling in this river catchment. The results demonstrated that terrestrial HA-like substances enhance its contents in summer ARE compared with BRE, whilst terrestrial FA-like substances were newly input in summer ARE, which was entirely absent upstream and downstream, suggesting that rain events could significantly input the terrestrial soil-derived DOM in the ambient downward catchments. Autochthonous FA-like substances in summer BRE could derive from phytoplankton in the downstream waters. The results also showed that DOM from wetland exhibited lower fluorescent intensity of humic-like peak A/C and fulvic-like peak A/M, molecular weight (S-R) and humification index (HIX) during the low-flow season. Built-up land, cropland, and unused land displayed higher a(335) (CDOM). A higher proportion of forest and industrial land in the SCs showed higher SUVA(254) values. Humic-like moiety, molecular weight and aromaticity were more responsive to land use during stormflow in summer. Rainfall could increase the export of soil DOM from cropland and unused land, which influences the spatial variation of HIX. The results in this study highlighted that terrestrial DOM has a significant influence on the biogeochemical alterations of DOM compositions and thus water quality in the downward watershed catchments, which might significantly vary according to the land-use types and their alterations by human activities.

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