4.5 Article

Influence of Hydrological Perturbations and Riverbed Sediment Characteristics on Hyporheic Zone Respiration of CO2 and N-2

Journal

JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH-BIOGEOSCIENCES
Volume 123, Issue 3, Pages 902-922

Publisher

AMER GEOPHYSICAL UNION
DOI: 10.1002/2017JG004090

Keywords

nutrient dynamics; hyporheic biogenic gas; water table fluctuations; dynamic permeability; losing rivers; Mediterranean climate

Funding

  1. Sonoma County Water Agency (SCWA)
  2. U.S. Department of Energy, Office of Science, Office of Biological and Environmental Research [DE-AC02-05CH11231]
  3. UFZ-Helmholtz Centre for Environmental Research, Leipzig, Germany

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Rivers in climatic zones characterized by dry and wet seasons often experience periodic transitions between losing and gaining conditions across the river-aquifer continuum. Infiltration shifts can stimulate hyporheic microbial biomass growth and cycling of riverine carbon and nitrogen leading to major exports of biogenic CO2 and N-2 to rivers. In this study, we develop and test a numerical model that simulates biological-physical feedback in the hyporheic zone. We used the model to explore different initial conditions in terms of dissolved organic carbon availability, sediment characteristics, and stochastic variability in aerobic and anaerobic conditions from water table fluctuations. Our results show that while highly losing rivers have greater hyporheic CO2 and N-2 production, gaining rivers allowed the greatest fraction of CO2 and N-2 production to return to the river. Hyporheic aerobic respiration and denitrification contributed 0.1-2g/m(2)/d of CO2 and 0.01-0.2g/m(2)/d of N-2; however, the suite of potential microbial behaviors varied greatly among sediment characteristics. We found that losing rivers that consistently lacked an exit pathway can store up to 100% of the entering C/N as subsurface biomass and dissolved gas. Our results demonstrate the importance of subsurface feedbacks whereby microbes and hydrology jointly control fate of C and N and are strongly linked to wet-season control of initial sediment conditions and hydrologic control of seepage direction. These results provide a new understanding of hydrobiological and sediment-based controls on hyporheic zone respiration, including a new explanation for the occurrence of anoxic microzones and large denitrification rates in gravelly riverbeds. Plain Language Summary River systems are important components of our landscape that help to degrade contaminants, support food webs, and transform organic matter. In this study, we developed and tested a model that could help reveal the role of the riverbed for these ecosystem services. We used the model to explore how different riverbed conditions eventually control the fate of carbon and nitrogen. Our results show that carbon and nitrogen transformations and the potential suite of microbial behaviors are dependent on the riverbed sediment structure and the water table conditions in the local groundwater system. The implications of this are that the riverbed sediments and the cumulative effect of water table conditions can control hyporheic processing. Under future river discharge conditions, assuming reduced river flows and siltation of riverbeds, reductions in total hyporheic processing may be observed.

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