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Seasonal variability in concentration, composition, age and fluxes of particulate organic carbon exchanged between the floodplain and Amazon River

by: Patricia Moreira-Turcq, Marie-Paule Bonnet, Marcelo Amorim, Marcelo Bernardes, Christelle Lagane, Laurence Maurice, Marcela Perez, Patrick Seyler
Global Biogeochem. Cycles (1 January 2013), pp. n/a-n/a, doi:10.1002/gbc.20022  Key: citeulike:11918049

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Abstract

The composition, sources and age of particulate organic matter were determined in an Amazonian river-floodplain system during rising, high, falling and low water periods over seven years (1999-2006), and a mass balance for total organic carbon (dissolved and particulate) was estimated. The Curuai floodplain, comprised of several temporally interconnected lakes, is permanently connected to the Amazon River via channels. Organic matter (OM) is imported to the floodplain from the Amazon River mainly during the rising water period and produced in the floodplain and exported to the river during high and falling water periods. No significant exchanges occurred during low water periods. The OM produced in the floodplain is characterized by low C/N ratios and by high chlorophyll a concentrations (Chl-a). The δ13C signature has a seasonal trend, with more negative δ13C values during the high water period than other periods. Δ14C results indicate that the bulk OM present in floodplain lakes is predominantly post-bomb (i.e., post-1950). Particulate organic carbon (POC) and dissolved organic carbon (DOC) fluxes exported by the Curuai floodplain represent 1.3 % and 0.1 %, respectively, of the POC and DOC annual fluxes in the mainstem Amazon River at Óbidos but may reach up to 3.3 % and 0.8 % during falling water. Based on Δ14C, δ13C, Chl-a and elemental analysis of the particulate organic matter, we demonstrate that floodplain lakes have intense phytoplankton and macrophyte primary production, which is partly exported to the main river channel. Floodplains are thus a significant source of modern and labile organic carbon to the river mainstem, where it can be rapidly degraded and recycled back to the atmosphere.


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