Abstract

The River Thurso, North Scotland, receives substantial terrestrial deliveries of dissolved organic matter (DOM) leached from Europe's most extensive blanket bogs. The relatively short distance between peatlands and coastal ocean offers potential for research to investigate source-to-sea processing of terrigenous dissolved organic carbon (DOC). Here, we determined DOC concentrations in the bulk (< 0.4μm), truly dissolved (< 5kDa), and colloidal fraction (5kDa - 0.4μm) as well as DOM absorbance and fluorescence spectra during two river catchment surveys and two corresponding coastal plume surveys, in early spring (1st sampling period) and late spring (2nd sampling period). DOC concentrations ranged from 79 to 3799μM in early spring and from 115 to 5126μM in late spring. DOM exhibited conservative mixing across the plume in both surveys, but the plume extended further offshore in the second survey due to a pulse of freshwater caused by recent rainfall. Fluorescence excitation-emission matrices (EEMs) and fluorescence indices revealed that the flushed DOM was humic-like, recently synthesized DOM. Coupled with C/N ratio analyses and molecular weight fractionation, the fluorescence indices also provided evidence for the gradual altering of DOM characteristics along the bog - headstream - loch - river continuum. The same analytical tools revealed that seasonal variations occurred within the DOM pool of marine origin, i.e., greater abundance of low-molecular weight bacterial or algal DOM in the late spring survey. The time scale of such variations relative to the flushing time of water through the aquatic continuum should be taken into account when interpreting the DOM property-salinity distributions of major river plumes.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call