Impact of different benthic animals on phosphorus dynamics
across the sediment-water interface |
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Authors: | Lei Zhang Xiaozhi Gu Chengxin Fan Jingge Shang Qiushi Shen Zhaode Wang and Ji Shen |
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Institution: | 1. State Key Laboratory of Lake Science and Environment, Nanjing Institute of Geography and Limnology, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Nanjing 210008, China;Graduate University of Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing 100049, China 2. State Key Laboratory of Lake Science and Environment, Nanjing Institute of Geography and Limnology, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Nanjing 210008, China |
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Abstract: | As a diagenetic progress, bioturbation influences solute exchange across the sediment-water interface (SWI). Different benthic
animals have various mechanical activities in sediment, thereby they may have different effects on solute exchange across the SWI.
This laboratory study examined the impacts of different benthic animals on phosphorus dynamics across the SWI. Tubificid worms and
Chironomidae larvae were introduced as model organisms which, based on their mechanical activities, belong to upward-conveyors
and gallery-diffusers, respectively. The microcosm simulation study was carried out with a continuous flow culture system, and all
sediment, water, and worms and larvae specimens were sampled from Taihu Lake, China. To compare their bioturbation effects, the
same biomass (17.1 g wet weight (ww)/m2) was adopted for worms and larvae.Worms altered no oxygen penetration depth in sediment,
while larvae increased the O2 penetration depth, compared to the control treatment. Their emergence also enhanced sediment O2 uptake.
The oxidation of ferrous iron in pore water produced ferric iron oxyhydroxides that adsorbed soluble reactive phosphorus (SRP) from
the overlying water and pore water. Larvae built obviously oxidized tubes with about 2 mm diameter and the maximum length of 6 cm
in sediment, and significantly decreased ferrous iron and SRP in the pore water compared to the control and worms treatments. Worms
constructed no visually-oxidized galleries in the sediment in contrast to larvae, and they did not significantly alter SRP in the pore
water relative to the control treatment. The adsorption of ferric iron oxyhydroxides to SRP caused by worms and larvae inhibited SRP
release from sediment. Comparatively, worms inhibited more SRP release than larvae based on the same biomass, as they successively
renewed the ferric iron oxyhydroxides rich oxidation layer through their deposition. |
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Keywords: | bioturbation oxygen pore water ferrous iron Tubificid worms Chironomidae larvae |
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