Abstract

Dissolved organic matter (DOM) is one of the most important fluxes in the global carbon cycle but its response to light exposure remains unclear at a molecular-level. The chemical response of DOM to light should vary with its molecular composition and environmental conditions while some basic hypotheses are still unclear, such as the balance between photobleaching and photo-humification and the question of oxidative properties. Here we exposed aquatic DOM from diverse freshwaters impacted by different levels of anthropogenic activity and algal exudates to environmentally-realistic light conditions. We found that photobleaching occurred in DOM with relatively high initial humic content producing low H/C molecules, whereas DOM with low initial humic content was humified. DOM pools with relatively high initial saturation and low aromaticity were prone to transform towards more unsaturated molecular formulae and high H/C molecules with a distinct decrease of bioavailability. Photo-transformation was mainly influenced by reactive intermediates, with reactive oxygen species (ROS) playing a dominant role in humification when the initial humus content of DOM was high. In contrast, for algal DOM with high protein content, it was likely that the autoxidation of excited state DOM was more important than indirect oxidation involving ROS. Our results reveal how photo-transformation patterns depend on the initial composition of DOM and provide new insights into the role of photochemical processes in biogeochemical cycling of DOM.

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