Fate of Dissolved Organic Carbon in Antarctic Surface Environments During Summer

While the role of supraglacial environments such as the cryoconite holes and surface snow in cycling of carbon and nutrients has gained momentum in the last decade, little has been done to assess how interactions with sunlight and microbes control the dissolved organic matter cycling in these enviro...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Journal of Geophysical Research: Biogeosciences
Main Authors: Samui, G., Antony, R., Thamban, M.
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:unknown
Published: 2020
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Online Access:https://gfzpublic.gfz-potsdam.de/pubman/item/item_5006632
Description
Summary:While the role of supraglacial environments such as the cryoconite holes and surface snow in cycling of carbon and nutrients has gained momentum in the last decade, little has been done to assess how interactions with sunlight and microbes control the dissolved organic matter cycling in these environments. In this study, the cryoconite holes, which are subjected to different light conditions, were monitored in the coastal Antarctica during the summer in order to determine how the geochemistry of these environments varied through the melt season. Additionally, mesocosm experiments were conducted to understand the impact of photochemical and microbial activities on dissolved organic carbon (DOC) and ionic constituents in the snow and cryoconite holes. In situ measurements of primary and bacterial production carried out in the surface snow and cryoconite holes showed that the primary production rates were higher than the bacterial production rates. Both photochemical and microbial processes resulted in changing the concentration of DOC, carboxylate, and nitrate ions in these environments. Sunlight‐induced production of biologically labile compounds, such as acetate and formate, and photochemical degradation of oxalate were also observed. Microbial activity had the opposite effect, resulting in an increase in oxalate and decrease in acetate and formate concentrations. Consequences of these combined processes would determine the fate of DOC and associated nutrients in the Antarctic supraglacial environments and potentially influence the local productivity within these systems.