Stable isotopic variation in particulate organic matter and dissolved inorganic compounds in a northern fjord : implications for present and past environments

The principle objectives of this study were (1) to gain a detailed understanding of processes resulting in isotopic variation in water column organic matter and (2) to establish a relationship between the isotopic composition of water column material to that of underlying sediments. To facilitate th...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Ostrom, Nathaniel Emil
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Memorial University of Newfoundland 1992
Subjects:
Online Access:https://research.library.mun.ca/6915/
https://research.library.mun.ca/6915/1/NathanielEmilOstrom_2.pdf
https://research.library.mun.ca/6915/3/NathanielEmilOstrom_2.pdf
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Summary:The principle objectives of this study were (1) to gain a detailed understanding of processes resulting in isotopic variation in water column organic matter and (2) to establish a relationship between the isotopic composition of water column material to that of underlying sediments. To facilitate this task nutrient and elemental abundance data and the stable isotopic composition of seston, sinking POM, sediments and inorganic compounds (DIC, NO₃ and NH₄⁺) was determined on a seasonal and spatial basis in a northern fjord, Conception Bay, Newfoundland. -- The concentration and isotopic composition of inorganic nitrogen in deep and pore waters provided insight into sources and cycling of these compounds. Ammonium in the porewaters obtained from the surface 20cm of sediment cores ranged in concentration from 34.7μM to 239.9μM. The nitrogen isotopic composition of porewater ammonium averaged 7.0‰ and was depleted in ¹⁵N by 2‰ relative to sediments. This difference indicates a small fractionation effect during the remineralization of ammonium from organic matter in sediments. Nitrate in water column samples had a very wide range in δ¹⁵N values of -6.2‰ to 7.9‰ and an average of 0.2 ± 3.6‰. The low δ¹⁵N of nitrate relative to pore water ammonium indicates that there is a large fractionation effect associated with nitrification (β = 1.0193) and that this reaction does not proceed to completion at the cold temperatures (<0゚C) present in the deep waters of this fjord. The presence of ammonium in deep waters and as a measurable flux from sediments confirms that this substrate is not completely consumed during nitrification. -- The δ¹⁵N of suspended POM varied from 5.2‰ to 20.2‰, with the highest values occurring in the spring at the base of the euphotic zone. High δ¹⁵N values may be a consequence of fractionation during peptide bond cleavage or deamination of proteins during partial degradation. Suspended POM δ¹³C values were narrower in range than δ¹⁵N and were between -26.7‰ and -21.9‰. Enrichments in ¹³c were ...