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DOI10.1002/lno.10583
A synoptic survey of microbial respiration, organic matter decomposition, and carbon efflux in US streams and rivers
Hill, Brian H.1; Elonen, Colleen M.1; Herlihy, Alan T.2; Jicha, Terri M.1; Mitchell, Richard M.3
发表日期2017-11-01
ISSN0024-3590
卷号62页码:S147-S159
英文摘要

We analyzed ecoenzyme activities related to organic matter processing in 1879 streams and rivers across the continental U.S. as part of the USEPA's National Rivers and Streams Assessment. Ecoenzymatic stoichiometry was used to construct models for carbon use efficiency (CUE) and decomposition (-k). Microbial respiration (R-m) was estimated from sediment organic carbon stocks, CUE, and -k. The streams and rivers were classified by size (headwaters: 1(st)-order; streams: 2(nd)-3(rd) order; small rivers: 4(th)-5(th) order; big rivers 6(th)-7(th) order; and great rivers8(th) order) and condition class (least, intermediate, and most disturbed), and grouped into nine ecoregions. There were ecoregion, stream size, and condition class effects for CUE, -k, and R-m, with R-m increasing from eastern ecoregions through the plains to the western ecoregions. CUE, -k, and R-m decreased with increasing streams size and increased with increasing disturbance. R-m, CUE, and -k were correlated with water and sediment chemistry; CUE and -k were also correlated with stream bed fine sediments; and CUE was further correlated with catchment land cover. R-m was extrapolated to ecoregional and national scales, and the results suggest that microbial assemblages account for 12% of the total CO2 outgassing, and nearly 50% of the aquatic metabolism C losses, from U.S. streams and rivers. Cumulative respiratory C losses increased from headwaters to small streams, then decreased with increasing stream size. This U-shaped respiration curve was not evident when streams were viewed by disturbance classes, suggesting that anthropogenic disturbances mask the expected organic matter processing signature of the river continuum.


语种英语
WOS记录号WOS:000415924700011
来源期刊LIMNOLOGY AND OCEANOGRAPHY
来源机构美国环保署
文献类型期刊论文
条目标识符http://gcip.llas.ac.cn/handle/2XKMVOVA/57484
作者单位1.US EPA, Off Res & Dev, Natl Hlth & Environm Effects Res Lab, Midcontinent Ecol Div, Duluth, MN 55804 USA;
2.Oregon State Univ, Dept Fisheries & Wildlife, Corvallis, OR 97331 USA;
3.US EPA, Off Water Off Wetlands Oceans & Watersheds, Washington, DC 20460 USA
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GB/T 7714
Hill, Brian H.,Elonen, Colleen M.,Herlihy, Alan T.,et al. A synoptic survey of microbial respiration, organic matter decomposition, and carbon efflux in US streams and rivers[J]. 美国环保署,2017,62:S147-S159.
APA Hill, Brian H.,Elonen, Colleen M.,Herlihy, Alan T.,Jicha, Terri M.,&Mitchell, Richard M..(2017).A synoptic survey of microbial respiration, organic matter decomposition, and carbon efflux in US streams and rivers.LIMNOLOGY AND OCEANOGRAPHY,62,S147-S159.
MLA Hill, Brian H.,et al."A synoptic survey of microbial respiration, organic matter decomposition, and carbon efflux in US streams and rivers".LIMNOLOGY AND OCEANOGRAPHY 62(2017):S147-S159.
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