Abstract

Abstract. Rates and apparent quantum yields of photomineralization (AQYDOC) and photomethanification (AQYCH4) of chromophoric dissolved organic matter (CDOM) in Saguenay River surface water were determined at three widely differing dissolved oxygen concentrations ([O2]) (suboxic, air saturation, and oxygenated) using simulated-solar radiation. Photomineralization increased linearly with CDOM absorbance photobleaching for all three O2 treatments. Whereas the rate of photochemical dissolved organic carbon (DOC) loss increased with increasing [O2], the ratio of fractional DOC loss to fractional absorbance loss showed an inverse trend. CDOM photodegradation led to a higher degree of mineralization under suboxic conditions than under oxic conditions. AQYDOC determined under oxygenated, suboxic, and air-saturated conditions increased, decreased, and remained largely constant with photobleaching, respectively; AQYDOC obtained under air saturation with short-term irradiations could thus be applied to longer exposures. AQYDOC decreased successively from ultraviolet B (UVB) to ultraviolet A (UVA) to visible (VIS), which, alongside the solar irradiance spectrum, points to VIS and UVA being the primary drivers for photomineralization in the water column. The photomineralization rate in the Saguenay River was estimated to be 2.31 × 108 mol C yr−1, accounting for only 1 % of the annual DOC input into this system. Photoproduction of CH4 occurred under both suboxic and oxic conditions and increased with decreasing [O2], with the rate under suboxic conditions ~ 7–8 times that under oxic conditions. Photoproduction of CH4 under oxic conditions increased linearly with photomineralization and photobleaching. Under air saturation, 0.00057 % of the photochemical DOC loss was diverted to CH4, giving a photochemical CH4 production rate of 4.36 × 10−6 mol m−2 yr−1 in the Saguenay River and, by extrapolation, of (1.9–8.1) × 108 mol yr−1 in the global ocean. AQYCH4 changed little with photobleaching under air saturation but increased exponentially under suboxic conditions. Spectrally, AQYCH4 decreased sequentially from UVB to UVA to VIS, with UVB being more efficient under suboxic conditions than under oxic conditions. On a depth-integrated basis, VIS prevailed over UVB in controlling CH4 photoproduction under air saturation while the opposite held true under O2-deficiency. An addition of micromolar levels of dissolved dimethyl sulfide (DMS) substantially increased CH4 photoproduction, particularly under O2-deficiency; DMS at nanomolar ambient concentrations in surface oceans is, however, unlikely a significant CH4 precursor. Results from this study suggest that CDOM-based CH4 photoproduction only marginally contributes to the CH4 supersaturation in modern surface oceans and to both the modern and Archean atmospheric CH4 budgets, but that the photochemical term can be comparable to microbial CH4 oxidation in modern oxic oceans. Our results also suggest that anoxic microniches in particulate organic matter and phytoplankton cells containing elevated concentrations of precursors of the methyl radical such as DMS may provide potential hotspots for CH4 photoproduction.

Highlights

  • Solar radiation in the ultraviolet (UV) and visible (VIS) regimes can break down chromophoric dissolved organic matter (CDOM), leading to the loss of absorbance (Del Vecchio and Blough, 2002) and dissolved organic carbon (DOC, i.e. photomineralization) (Obernosterer and Benner, 2004) and the production of CO2 (Miller and Zepp, 1995), biolabile carbon (Kieber et al, 1989; Miller et al, 2002), and various biologically and atmospherically active trace compounds (Moran and Zepp, 1997; Liss et al, 2014)

  • The tests utilizing different light filters indicate that photochemical O2 consumption, bleaching, and acidification decreased successively with the spectral composition of the incident light changing from ultraviolet B (UVB) to ultraviolet A (UVA) to VIS (Table 2), which conforms to the results of Lou and Xie (2006)

  • Photochemical breakdown of CDOM led to a higher degree of mineralization (i.e. DIC production) under suboxic conditions than under oxic conditions

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Summary

Introduction

Solar radiation in the ultraviolet (UV) and visible (VIS) regimes can break down chromophoric dissolved organic matter (CDOM), leading to the loss of absorbance (i.e. photobleaching) (Del Vecchio and Blough, 2002) and dissolved organic carbon (DOC, i.e. photomineralization) (Obernosterer and Benner, 2004) and the production of CO2 (Miller and Zepp, 1995), biolabile carbon (Kieber et al, 1989; Miller et al, 2002), and various biologically and atmospherically active trace compounds (Moran and Zepp, 1997; Liss et al, 2014). Many trace gases produced from CDOM-involved photoprocesses are supersaturated in natural waters (e.g. carbonyl sulfide, iodomethane, carbon monoxide), thereby contributing to their budgets in the atmosphere (Liss et al, 2014). Bange and Uher (2005) assessed the possibility of CH4 photoproduction (i.e. photomethanification) from CDOM in a number of river and estuarine systems and concluded that this pathway is significant only under anoxia in the presence of an added methyl radical precursor. They only tested acetone but suggested that other watersoluble methyl radical precursors such as acetonitrile, methionine, and dimethyl sulfide (DMSO), could be good candidates as well

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