4.7 Article

Going with the flow: Planktonic processing of dissolved organic carbon in streams

Journal

SCIENCE OF THE TOTAL ENVIRONMENT
Volume 625, Issue -, Pages 519-530

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
DOI: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2017.12.285

Keywords

Terrestrial DOC; Agricultural catchment; Flood pulse; Hydrology; Bacteria

Funding

  1. DCE - Danish Centre for Environment and Energy, Aarhus University
  2. Danish Council for Strategic Research [BufferTech project] [1305-00017B]
  3. Brazilian National Council for Scientific and Technological Development [CNPq] [302280/2015-4]
  4. Foundation for Research Support of the Federal State of Minas Gerais [FAPEMIG] [CRA PPM 00596-16]
  5. Carlsberg Foundation [2013_01_0833]
  6. German Federal Ministry of Education and Research [BMBF] [02WT1290A]
  7. German Research Foundation (DFG) projects [PU 136/7-1, ZA 742/2-1]

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A large part of the organic carbon in streams is transported by pulses of terrestrial dissolved organic carbon (tDOC) during hydrological events, which is more pronounced in agricultural catchments due to their hydrological flashiness. The majority of the literature considers stationary benthic biofilms and hyporheic biofilms to dominate uptake and processing of tDOC. Here, we argue for expanding this viewpoint to planktonic bacteria, which are transported downstream together with tDOC pulses, and thus perceive them as a less variable resource relative to stationary benthic bacteria. We show that pulse DOC can contribute significantly to the annual DOC export of streams and that planktonic bacteria take up considerable labile tDOC from such pulses in a short time frame, with the DOC uptake being as high as that of benthic biofilm bacteria. Furthermore, we show that planktonic bacteria efficiently take up labile tDOC which strongly increases planktonic bacterial production and abundance. We found that the response of planktonic bacteria to tDOC pulses was stronger in smaller streams than in larger streams, which may be related to bacterial metacommunity dynamics. Furthermore, the response of planktonic bacterial abundancewas influenced by soluble reactive phosphorus concentration, pointing to phosphorus limitation. Our data suggest that planktonic bacteria can efficiently utilize tDOC pulses and likely determine tDOC fate during downstream transport, influencing aquatic food webs and related biochemical cycles. (C) 2017 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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