College of Ocean and Earth Sciences, Xiamen University
SEARCH
Chinese
Favorites
Luncheon Seminars #76: The level of phosphate controls decomposition rate of labile organic matter in hypoxic coastal waters
2017/6/27 1358
2017-07-03 2017-7-3 12:00-13:00
Zhanfei Liu, Associate Professor
A3-206 Zhou Long Quan Building

Institution】:The University of Texas at Austin, USA

Host】:Xiaolin Li      【Contact】:Angela Liu

Abstract

Despite extensive studies of the development and dynamics of hypoxia in coastal oceans, factors controlling the decomposition rates and pathways of labile organic matter (OM) in hypoxic waters are not well understood. We investigated peptide decomposition in a stratified water column in the hypoxic region of the northern Gulf of Mexico by conducting on-deck incubation experiments.  Our results showed that peptide decomposition efficiency was limited by the availability of soluble reactive phosphorus (Pi) in the surface water (<0.3 µM), as it was greatly enhanced after Pi addition to the incubation water. In contrast, peptide decomposition rate in the subsurface water, enriched with Pi (0.4-1.2 µM), was twice as high as that in the surface water, concomitant with the development of fast-growing bacteria during the incubation. These results indicate that a high level of Pi is crucial in stimulating the growth of bacterial strains with high RNA contents and thus faster OM decomposition, a positive feedback on hypoxia formation in Pi-enriched coastal subsurface waters. These results also offer insights into organic matter decomposition mechanism in deep open ocean enriched with nutrients. 




Copyright ©2014 College of Ocean & Earth Sciences