4.7 Article

River Organic Carbon Fluxes Modulated by Hydrodynamic Sorting of Particulate Organic Matter

Journal

GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH LETTERS
Volume 49, Issue 3, Pages -

Publisher

AMER GEOPHYSICAL UNION
DOI: 10.1029/2021GL096343

Keywords

compound-specific stable isotopes; carbon fluxes; rivers; NanoSIMS; sediment transport; hydrodynamic sorting

Funding

  1. Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft [STR 373/34-1]

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This study investigates the processes controlling the amount and composition of particulate organic carbon (POC) transported by rivers. The findings suggest that hydrodynamic sorting processes, combined with downstream fining, amplify the proportion of fine, mineral-associated POC, which has a greater chance of export and preservation in marine basins compared to plant detritus.
Rivers regulate the global carbon cycle by transferring particulate organic carbon (POC) from terrestrial landscapes to marine sedimentary basins, but the processes controlling the amount and composition of fluvially exported POC are poorly understood. We propose that hydrodynamic sorting processes modify POC fluxes during fluvial transit. We test this hypothesis by studying POC transported along a similar to 1,200 km reach of the Rio Bermejo, Argentina. Nanoscale secondary ion mass spectrometry revealed that POC was either fine, mineral-associated organic matter, or coarse discrete organic particles. Mineral-associated POC is more resistant to oxidation and has a lower particle settling velocity than discrete POC. Consequently, hydraulic sorting and downstream fining amplify the proportion of fine, mineral-associated POC from similar to 55% to similar to 78% over 1,220 km of downstream transit. This suggests that mineral-associated POC has a greater probability of export and preservation in marine basins than plant detritus, which may be oxidized to CO2 during transit.

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