Origin, distributions, and environmental significance of ubiquitous humic-like fluorophores in Antarctic lakes and streams

Water Res. 2019 Oct 15:163:114901. doi: 10.1016/j.watres.2019.114901. Epub 2019 Jul 22.

Abstract

This study characterized dissolved organic matter (DOM) obtained from 47 lakes and 2 streams on ice-free areas at Lützow-Holm Bay and Amundsen Bay in East Antarctica (n = 74), where few biogeochemical studies have been historically conducted. Samples were analyzed for basic water chemistry and by resin fractionation, UV-vis spectroscopy, and excitation emission matrix spectroscopy combined with parallel factor analysis (EEM-PARAFAC). Salinity of the samples ranged very broadly from fresh to hypersaline as a result of evaporative concentration. There was a clear positive correlation between log-salinity and the spectral slopes of DOM (S275-295), an indicator of photodegradation. Thus, we interpreted the correlation as a progression of photodegradation by prolonged water retention time. Of the identified seven PARAFAC components, three ubiquitous humic-like components decreased as photodegradation progressed, while a photorefractory UVC humic-like component increased its relative abundance. A non-humic component, traditionally defined as Peak N, did not show a trend depending on photodegradation, and its level was high in nutrient-rich lakes, presumably due to high in-situ production. We found robust correlations between the relative abundance of the ubiquitous humic-like components and that of the Peak N component in the bulk DOM irrespective of water types or ice-free areas. We proposed there were common processes that generated the ubiquitous humic-like components from the Peak N component in the Lützow-Holm Bay and Amundsen Bay lakes and streams, such as bacterial processing of primary production-derived DOM and photochemical transformation of microbial DOM.

Keywords: Autochthonous; DOM; Fluorescence; Microbial process; PARAFAC; Photodegradation.

MeSH terms

  • Antarctic Regions
  • Factor Analysis, Statistical
  • Humic Substances
  • Lakes*
  • Rivers*
  • Spectrometry, Fluorescence

Substances

  • Humic Substances