Kinetic isotope effect of labile organic matter in the coastal sediment of northern South China Sea
ID:1494 View Protection:ATTENDEE Updated Time:2024-12-31 21:55:09 Hits:750 Poster Presentation

Start Time:2025-01-16 20:05(Asia/Shanghai)

Duration:15min

Session:S18 Session 18-The River-Estuary-Bay Continuum: Unveiling the Carbon and Nitrogen Cycles Under Global Change » S18-PThe River-Estuary-Bay Continuum: Unveiling the Carbon and Nitrogen Cycles Under Global Change

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Abstract
To elucidate the geochemical behavior of labile organic matter (OM) in sediments under the pressures of intensified coastal eutrophication, we examined the fatty acid abundance and their carbon stable isotope values of a sediment core from the shelf of the northern South China Sea (NSCS), Across this sediment core, relatively low total organic carbon content of around 0.60% was observed. Fatty acids with less carbon numbers exhibited exponential decreases downward with degradation rate constants ranging from 0.10 to 0.17 y-1, no matter they were from single sources (14:0 presumably from marine OM and ai-15:0, i-15:0, 15:0 from bacterial OM) or mixed sources (16:0). Meanwhile fatty acids with more carbon numbers, either 18:0 and 24:0 from mixed sources, or 26:0 and 28:0 presumably from terrestrial input, were less varied in concentrations with depth. This demonstrates a preferential decomposition of labile fatty acids during the early diagenesis of coastal sediment organic matter. A decrease of labile fatty acids δ13C values was observed with the decomposition, from which kinetic isotope fractionations were predicted ranging from 0.7 to 1.5‰. Using the closed-system KIE model, the isotope fractionation by decomposition has been quantitatively assessed, and applied to constrain the mixing model with two end-members, marine and terrestrial organic matter respectively. The model results indicate that a maximum difference of up to 22% can be observed in the relative abundance of fatty acids from marine phytoplankton. This finding together with the low organic carbon content and rapid removal of fatty acids in the top sediment, demonstrates the poor preservation of labile organic matter on the shelf of NSCS.
Keywords
fatty acid, compound specific isotope analysis, decomposition, coastal carbon sequestration, South China Sea
Speaker
Naican Hu
Master State Key Laboratory of Marine Environmental Science

Submission Author
Naican Hu State Key Laboratory of Marine Environmental Science
Tengteng Wang State Key Laboratory of Marine Environmental Science
Chuhan Lin State Key Laboratory of Marine Environmental Science
Tiantian Tang State Key Laboratory of Marine Environmental Science
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Important Date
  • Conference Date

    Jan 13

    2025

    to

    Jan 17

    2025

  • Sep 27 2024

    Draft paper submission deadline

  • Feb 17 2025

    Registration deadline

Sponsored By
State Key Laboratory of Marine Environmental Science, Xiamen University
Organized By
State Key Laboratory of Marine Environmental Science, Xiamen University
Department of Earth Sciences, National Natural Science Foundation of China
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