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Distinct Non-conservative Behavior of Dissolved Organic Matter after Mixing Solimões/Negro and Amazon/Tapajós River Waters.

Siyu LiMourad HarirPhilippe Schmitt-KopplinFausto Machado-SilvaMichael GonsiorDavid BastvikenAlex Enrich-PrastJuliana ValleNorbert Hertkorn
Published in: ACS ES&T water (2023)
Positive and negative electrospray ionization Fourier transform ion cyclotron resonance mass spectrometry and 1 H NMR revealed major compositional and structural changes of dissolved organic matter (DOM) after mixing two sets of river waters in Amazon confluences: the Solimões and Negro Rivers (S + N) and the Amazon and Tapajós Rivers (A + T). We also studied the effects of water mixing ratios and incubation time on the composition and structure of DOM molecules. NMR spectra demonstrated large-scale structural transformations in the case of S + N mixing, with gain of pure and functionalized aliphatic units and loss of all other structures after 1d incubation. A + T mixing resulted in comparatively minor structural alterations, with a major gain of small aliphatic biomolecular binding motifs. Remarkably, structural alterations from mixing to 1d incubation were in essence reversed from 1d to 5d incubation for both S + N and A + T mixing experiments. Heterotrophic bacterial production (HBP) in endmembers S, N, and S + N mixtures remained near 0.03 μgC L -1 h -1 , whereas HBP in A, T, and A + T were about five times higher. High rates of dark carbon fixation took place at S + N mixing in particular. In-depth biogeochemical characterization revealed major distinctions between DOM biogeochemical changes and temporal evolution at these key confluence sites within the Amazon basin.
Keyphrases
  • mass spectrometry
  • high resolution
  • magnetic resonance
  • single cell
  • climate change
  • optical coherence tomography
  • organic matter
  • quantum dots
  • transcription factor