4.7 Article

Coupled dynamics of iron, manganese, and phosphorus in brackish coastal sediments populated by cable bacteria

Journal

LIMNOLOGY AND OCEANOGRAPHY
Volume 66, Issue 7, Pages 2611-2631

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/lno.11776

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Netherlands Organization for Scientific Research (NWO) [865.13.005]
  2. ERC Starting Grant from the European Research Council under the European Community's Seventh Framework Program [278364]
  3. BONUS COCOA Project - EU [2112932-1]
  4. BONUS COCOA Project - FORMAS [2112932-1]
  5. Swedish Agency for Marine and Water Management (Havs-och vattenmyndigheten) [DNR 1376-18]

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The study found that in the eutrophic, brackish Gulf of Finland, sediments contain distinct layers enriched in iron, manganese, and phosphorus, with evidence of cable bacteria activity. The layer enriched in iron and phosphorus is likely formed beneath a layer rich in manganese oxides, which are mostly deposited from the water column.
Coastal waters worldwide suffer from increased eutrophication and seasonal bottom water hypoxia. Here, we assess the dynamics of iron (Fe), manganese (Mn), and phosphorus (P) in sediments of the eutrophic, brackish Gulf of Finland populated by cable bacteria. At sites where bottom waters are oxic in spring, surface enrichments of Fe and Mn oxides and high abundances of cable bacteria were observed in sediments upon sampling in early summer. At one site, Fe and P were enriched in a thin layer (similar to 3 mm) just below the sediment-water interface. X-ray absorption near edge structure and micro X-ray fluorescence analyses indicate that two-thirds of the P in this layer was associated with poorly crystalline Fe oxides, with an additional contribution of Mn(II) phosphates. The Fe enriched layer was directly overlain by a Mn oxide-rich surface layer (similar to 2 mm). The Fe oxide layer was likely of diagenetic origin, formed through dissolution of Fe monosulfides and carbonates, potentially induced by cable bacteria in the preceding months when bottom waters were oxic. Most of the Mn oxides were likely deposited from the water column as part of a cycle of repeated deposition and remobilization. Further research is required to confirm whether cable bacteria activity in spring indeed promotes the formation of distinct layers enriched in Fe, Mn, and P minerals in Gulf of Finland sediments. The temporal variations in biogeochemical cycling in this seasonally hypoxic coastal system, potentially controlled by cable bacteria activity, have little impact on permanent sedimentary Fe, Mn, and P burial.

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