Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
9462394 | Global and Planetary Change | 2005 | 16 Pages |
Abstract
The decay during sedimentation can be described by two-exponential or decay regression models for organic carbon, total nitrogen, chlorophyll a, pheophorbide a, chlorophyllide a, chlorophyll b, and most carotenoids, but not for pheophytin a, pheophytin b, and pyropheophytin a. The two-phase character of the models outlined that, for the former components, the flux diminished strongly in a first phase down to 250-m water depth and remained rather stable below 250 m. The chlorophyll a/carbon ratio also decreased with depth, whereas the pheophytin a/carbon ratio and the pyropheophytin a/carbon ratio increased with depth. From chlorophyll a, plus its degradation products, 28% reached the lake bottom when compared to the sedimentation below the euphotic zone. Based on the marker pigments fucoxanthin, chlorophyll b, and zeaxanthin, the contribution of the main phytoplankton groups to the settled chlorophyll a was estimated as 87% Bacillariophyceae+Chrysophyceae, 11% Chlorophyta, and 2% cyanobacterial picoplankton. These relationships changed only little during the sedimentation through the whole water column, but diverged from compositions calculated for the summer standing crop.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Earth and Planetary Sciences
Earth-Surface Processes
Authors
Susanne Fietz, Michael Sturm, Andreas Nicklisch,