Abstract

AbstractThe hydrogen isotope ratio (δ2H) of lipid biomarkers from phytoplankton and terrestrial plants were measured in surface sediments from Chinese marginal seas (CMS), in order to evaluate processes affecting their spatial distribution, and by extension, the controls on organic carbon cycling in these dynamic marginal seas. The dinoflagellate sterol dinosterol and the microalgal sterol brassicasterol had low δ2H values (<−300%) near the mouth of the Yangtze River. Near the mouth of the Yellow River, dinosterol again had low δ2H values but brassicasterol had intermediate (−292 to −281%) δ2H values. This discrepancy in the δ2H values of two phytoplankton sterols may be explained by the timing of dinoflagellate production relative to that of brassicasterol producers (e.g., diatoms). The δ2H values of C16:0 fatty acid, synthesized by all organisms, had intermediate δ2H values (−199 to −178%) near the Yangtze River and lowest δ2H C16:0 values (−216 to −206%) occurred near the old Yellow River delta. The lowest δ2H C28:0 values (<−184%) occurred adjacent to rivers, suggesting that leaf‐wax lipids produced on the loess plateau, which are enriched in 2H, may contribute less to the nearshore environment than the offshore regions. Higher δ2H C28:0 values offshore may be explained by a larger contribution of leaf wax fatty acids from aerosols relative to river‐borne suspended particles. Lipid biomarker δ2H fingerprinting thus provides a new tool for deciphering the controls on organic carbon cycling and accumulation in the dynamic CMS.

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