4.5 Article

The distribution of colloidal and particulate bioactive metals in Narragansett Bay, RI

Journal

MARINE CHEMISTRY
Volume 71, Issue 1-2, Pages 143-163

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
DOI: 10.1016/S0304-4203(00)00046-3

Keywords

colloid; particulate; metals; cross flow filtration; Narragansett Bay

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The bioactive metals Fe, Mn, Cu, Zn and Ni in Narragansett Bay, RI, were partitioned into soluble, colloidal and particulate size fractions using a combination of conventional and cross-flow filtrations. Particulate samples (0.2-8.0 mu m; > 8 mu m) were chemically fractionated into acetic-acid reactive and non-reactive metals. Conventional dissolved samples (< 0.2 mu m) were separated into soluble (< 1 kDa) as well as smaller (1-8 kDa) and larger (8 kDa-0.2 mu m) colloidal size classes. The particulate phase comprised 2%-98% of the total metal loads decreasing in the order Fe > Mn > Zn > Cu > Ni with concentrations in the 0.2-0.8 mu m fraction being generally higher than in the > 8.0 mu m fraction. The acid leachable fraction of the particulate phase increased from similar to 32%-80% in the order Fe < Cu < Ni < Zn = Mn, with larger particulates (> 8.0 mu m) being generally less labile than small particulates (0.2-8.0 mu m) The colloidal phase represented an average 4%-96% of the dissolved metals, ranging in importance from Fe (96%) > Cu (44%) > Ni (25%) > Zn (7%) > Mn (4%). Although generally small. the colloidal fraction of Zn and Mn was highest in a region of the bay where biomass typically is high. Changes in soluble and colloidal fractions along a transect through the bay indicate that a significant proportion of Fe, Cu and Ni were transferred from ''dissolved'' to particulate size fractions via colloid aggregation. Predicting colloidal metal concentrations from measurements of particulate mass (C-p) and literature values of colloid metal partition coefficients (K-c) underestimated the measured concentrations by 5-50 X. Acetic acid leachable metal concentrations in the small particle (0.2-8 mu m) phase correlated well with metal concentrations in the larger (8 kDa-0.2 mu m) colloid fraction (r = 0.91-0.99). In contrast, metals in the smaller colloid fraction (1-8 kDa) were for the most part independent of any measured parameters. Metals were not distributed equally between colloidal size classes; colloidal Zn was associated with larger colloids (> 90%), Fe and Ni were associated primarily with larger colloids (similar to 70-85%) but also with the smaller colloid fraction, while greater than or similar to 70% of colloidal Cu was associated with smaller colloids. The non-uniform distribution of metals within colloidal size classes indicates that metal:colloid associations are regulated by specific interactions. These findings suggest that it is inappropriate to employ single, non-specific sorbing metal tracers (e.g. Th) to delimit the pathways and kinetics of bioactive metal interactions with marine colloids. (C) 2000 Elsevier Science B.V. All rights reserved.

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