Abstract

Abstract. Southeast Asian peatland-draining rivers have attracted much attention due to their high dissolved organic carbon (DOC) yield and high CO2 emissions under anthropogenic influences. In August 2016, we carried out a field investigation of the Rajang River and its estuary, a tropical system located in Sarawak, Malaysia. The Rajang has peatland in its estuary, while the river basin is covered by tropical rainforest. DOC-δ13C in the Rajang ranged from −28.7 ‰ to −20.1 ‰, with a U-shaped trend from river to estuary. For particulate organic carbon (POC), δ13C ranged between −29.4 ‰ and −31.1 ‰ in the river, and there was a clear increasing trend towards more enriched δ13C values with higher salinity. In the estuary, there was a linear conservative dilution pattern for dissolved organic matter composition (as quantified by D- and L-amino acid enantiomers) plotted against DOC-δ13C, whereas when plotted against salinity, dissolved D- and L-amino acid enantiomer values were higher than the theoretical dilution value. Together, these data indicate that the addition of DOC to the estuary (by peatland) not only increased the DOC concentration but also altered its composition, by adding more biodegraded, 13C-depleted organic matter into the bulk dissolved organic matter. Alteration of organic matter composition (addition of a more degraded subpart) was also apparent for the particulate phase, but patterns were less clear. The Rajang was characterized by DOC to DON (dissolved organic nitrogen) ratios of 50 in the river section, with loss of DON in the estuary increasing the ratio to 140, suggesting an unbalanced export of organic carbon and nitrogen. Where affected by anthropogenic activities, further assessment of organic carbon to nitrogen ratios is needed.

Highlights

  • Fluxes and cycling of organic matter (OM) in rivers and estuaries are important influences on global biogeochemical cycles and climate change

  • The lability of organic matter determines how rapidly organic carbon will be transformed into inorganic carbon (CO2), which can vary from hours to millions of years

  • dissolved organic carbon (DOC)-δ13C ranged from −28.7 ‰ to −20.1 ‰ (Table 1)

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Summary

Introduction

Fluxes and cycling of organic matter (OM) in rivers and estuaries are important influences on global biogeochemical cycles and climate change. Based on 14C in organic carbon, Mayorga et al (2005) determined that the degradation of recently synthesized organic matter in the river basin was the main reason Amazonian river waters were supersaturated in CO2 and a source of atmospheric CO2. This highlights the potential importance of organic matter stability for carbon cycling within river systems. Nitrogen is another important element in organic mat-

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