Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
9448892 | Journal of Experimental Marine Biology and Ecology | 2005 | 19 Pages |
Abstract
The influence of seagrass Zostera marina on sediment characteristics was examined in two contrasting sediments, one organic-rich and one organic-poor. The presence of plants leads to reduced sediment redox potential in both sediment types compared to bare sediment with the largest effects in the organic-poor sediment. Z. marina stimulated the sulfate reduction rates in organic-poor sediment with â¼50% and higher pools of dissolved organic carbon (DOC) were found. In contrast, sulfate reduction rates were lower in vegetated compared to bare sites in the organic-rich sediment. Despite a low contribution of dissolved carbohydrate (DCHO) to the DOC pool (<5%), the seagrass vegetation was responsible for an increase of â¼50% in DCHO pools with a peak in the root zone suggesting that Z. marina supplied DCHO to the pore waters. The Z. marina meadows also enhanced the contribution of particulate carbohydrate (PCHO) to sedimentary particulate organic carbon (POC) pools by 6-14% compared to bare sediment. Although the PCHO pools were higher in organic-rich than organic-poor sediments, the analyses of carbohydrate composition revealed that three groups of neutral sugars including glucose, galactose and mannose+xylose were the major compounds of PCHO and contributed with >60% to sedimentary carbohydrate pools at both sites. Only glucose showed depletion with depth in the vegetated sediments, whereas the percentage of ribose and rhamnose increased indicating a selective degradation of labile carbohydrates in the meadows. Galactose and mannose+xylose appeared to represent a refractory part of carbohydrate that remained after degradation of the more labile components. The sugar content was rather constant with depth at the bare organic-rich sediment indicating that only recalcitrant carbohydrate pools were buried. There was less difference in the PCHO composition profiles between vegetated and bare organic-poor sediments.
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Authors
Tritep Vichkovitten, Marianne Holmer,