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1.
J Soils Sediments ; 23(10): 3638-3657, 2023.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37791373

RESUMO

Purpose: This study (1) investigated the extent to which flocculation and the hydrological and morphological attributes of an interior salmon-bearing river regulate the seasonal storage of marine-derived nutrients (MDN) and (2) compared the contribution of MDN to the fine bed sediment relative to other nutrient sources to the river. Methods: Previous research has determined that the co-existence of re-suspended fine sediment, generated by salmon redd construction, with salmonid excretion and decay products in the water column creates ideal conditions for the flocculation of these inorganic and organic particles. Stored and suspended fine bed sediment was sampled from seven sites with varying morphologies and bed substrate down the length of a large spawning river in the interior of British Columbia over a 12-month period. MDN contributions to the sediment was tracked using aggregated versus dispersed particle size, carbon-to-nitrogen ratios, stable carbon and nitrogen isotopes, and MixSIAR modeling. Results and discussion: (1) There was a significant longitudinal spatial distinction of nutrient retention between sites upstream and downstream of a large seasonally inundated floodplain; (2) the MDN isotopic signal in the surficial stored bed sediment in this sample year was short term; and (3) upstream spawner numbers, substrate size, stream morphology, and discharge were relevant to both the magnitude and retention time of sediment-associated MDN. Conclusion: A cumulative magnification of MDN was correlated with the distance from the headwaters and the number of upstream spawners. The relationship between MDN retention in interior rivers, and possible multi-year accumulation, was influenced by variability in channel morphology, substrate size, and the presence of an inundated floodplain halfway down the river.

2.
Sci Rep ; 9(1): 1776, 2019 02 11.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30742038

RESUMO

Botryococcus braunii is a colonial microalga that appears early in the fossil record and is a sensitive proxy of environmental and hydroclimatic conditions. Palaeozoic Botryococcus fossils which contribute up to 90% of oil shales and approximately 1% of crude oil, co-localise with diagnostic geolipids from the degradation of source-signature hydrocarbons. However more recent Holocene sediments demonstrate no such association. Consequently, Botryococcus are identified in younger sediments by morphology alone, where potential misclassifications could lead to inaccurate paleoenvironmental reconstructions. Here we show that a combination of flow cytometry and ancient DNA (aDNA) sequencing can unambiguously identify Botryococcus microfossils in Holocene sediments with hitherto unparalleled accuracy and rapidity. The application of aDNA sequencing to microfossils offers a far-reaching opportunity for understanding environmental change in the recent geological record. When allied with other high-resolution palaeoenvironmental information such as aDNA sequencing of humans and megafauna, aDNA from microfossils may allow a deeper and more precise understanding of past environments, ecologies and migrations.


Assuntos
Fósseis , Genoma de Planta , Hidrocarbonetos/metabolismo , Microalgas/genética , Microalgas/metabolismo , DNA de Plantas/genética
3.
Sci Rep ; 8(1): 13073, 2018 08 30.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30166587

RESUMO

Increasing complexity in human-environment interactions at multiple watershed scales presents major challenges to sediment source apportionment data acquisition and analysis. Herein, we present a step-change in the application of Bayesian mixing models: Deconvolutional-MixSIAR (D-MIXSIAR) to underpin sustainable management of soil and sediment. This new mixing model approach allows users to directly account for the 'structural hierarchy' of a river basin in terms of sub-watershed distribution. It works by deconvoluting apportionment data derived for multiple nodes along the stream-river network where sources are stratified by sub-watershed. Source and mixture samples were collected from two watersheds that represented (i) a longitudinal mixed agricultural watershed in the south west of England which had a distinct upper and lower zone related to topography and (ii) a distributed mixed agricultural and forested watershed in the mid-hills of Nepal with two distinct sub-watersheds. In the former, geochemical fingerprints were based upon weathering profiles and anthropogenic soil amendments. In the latter compound-specific stable isotope markers based on soil vegetation cover were applied. Mixing model posterior distributions of proportional sediment source contributions differed when sources were pooled across the watersheds (pooled-MixSIAR) compared to those where source terms were stratified by sub-watershed and the outputs deconvoluted (D-MixSIAR). In the first example, the stratified source data and the deconvolutional approach provided greater distinction between pasture and cultivated topsoil source signatures resulting in a different posterior distribution to non-deconvolutional model (conventional approaches over-estimated the contribution of cultivated land to downstream sediment by 2 to 5 times). In the second example, the deconvolutional model elucidated a large input of sediment delivered from a small tributary resulting in differences in the reported contribution of a discrete mixed forest source. Overall D-MixSIAR model posterior distributions had lower (by ca 25-50%) uncertainty and quicker model run times. In both cases, the structured, deconvoluted output cohered more closely with field observations and local knowledge underpinning the need for closer attention to hierarchy in source and mixture terms in river basin source apportionment. Soil erosion and siltation challenge the energy-food-water-environment nexus. This new tool for source apportionment offers wider application across complex environmental systems affected by natural and human-induced change and the lessons learned are relevant to source apportionment applications in other disciplines.

4.
J Environ Qual ; 44(5): 1605-16, 2015 Sep.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26436277

RESUMO

The use of sediment color as a fingerprint property to determine sediment sources is an emerging technique that can provide a rapid and inexpensive means of investigating sediment sources. The present study aims to test the feasibility of color fingerprint properties to apportion sediment sources within the South Tobacco Creek Watershed (74 km) in Manitoba, Canada. Suspended sediment from 2009 to 2011 at six monitoring stations and potential source samples along the main stem of the creek were collected. Reflectance spectra of sediments and source materials were quantified using a diffuse reflectance spectrometry, and 16 color coefficients were derived from several color space models. Canonical discriminant analysis was used to reclassify and downsize sediment source groups. After the linear additive test and stepwise discriminant function analysis, four color coefficients were chosen to fit the Stable Isotope Analysis in R model. Consistent with the conventional fingerprinting approach, the color fingerprint results demonstrated a switch in the dominant sediment source between the headwaters and the outlet of the watershed, with the main sources being topsoil in the upper reaches, whereas outcrop shale and stream bank materials dominated in the lower reaches. The color fingerprinting approach can be integrated with conventional fingerprints (e.g., geochemical and fallout radionuclide properties) to improve source discrimination, which is a key component for source ascription modeling. We concluded that the use of color fingerprints is a promising, cost-effective technique for sediment source fingerprinting.

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