Abstract

Heterocyst glycolipids (HGs) are biomarkers of important freshwater and marine diazotrophs known as heterocystous cyanobacteria. Recent research has found that HGs with hexose moieties (C6) are derived from free-living, mostly freshwater species while those with pentose moieties (C5) are derived from diatom-symbiont, mostly marine species. Here, we analyzed 39 surface sediments from a study area ranging from the Changjiang Estuary to the offshore East China Sea for HGs to investigate distribution patterns at this freshwater-seawater interface. We detected both C5 and C6 HGs in these samples; however, they had different spatial distributions: the C6 HG abundance was highest at the freshwater end of the estuary and decease offshore, whereas the abundance of C5 HGs displayed almost inverse pattern. We hypothesized that such distributions were likely caused by the mixing of freshwater and seawater, leading to a mixture of HGs derived from inland waters and/or soils and the marine environment. The proportion of C6 HGs to total HGs, defined as the FHG index, decreased with distance offshore, possibly reflecting the delivery of freshwater into the ocean. The FHG index changed curvilinearly with salinity, likely resulting from concentration-based weighting of end-member contributions. The FHG index correlated linearly (r2 = 0.76) with δ13Corg, suggesting that FHG could be used to indicate relative contributions of freshwater-delivered terrestrial organic matter in this estuarine and coastal region. However, the FHG index did not linearly correlate with the branched and isoprenoid tetraether (BIT) index, another proxy used for terrestrial input, likely because the BIT index is predominantly controlled by variations in marine crenarchaeol production.

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