Assessing the prevalence, products, and pathways of dissolved organic matter partial photo-oxidation in arctic surface waters

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TitleAssessing the prevalence, products, and pathways of dissolved organic matter partial photo-oxidation in arctic surface waters
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2020
AuthorsWard, CP, Cory, RM
JournalEnvironmental Science: Processes & Impacts
Volume22
Pagination1214–1223
Date Published02/2020
ISSN2050-7887, 2050-7895
KeywordsLTER-ARC, update-2021-02
Abstract

Isotope tracer experiments reveal that rates of dissolved organic matter partial photochemical oxidation are considerably underestimated in arctic surface waters. , In sunlit waters, photodegradation of dissolved organic matter (DOM) yields completely oxidized carbon ( i.e. , CO 2 ) as well as a suite of partially oxidized compounds formed from oxygen incorporation ( i.e. , partial photo-oxidation). Of these two groups of DOM photo-products, more studies focus on CO 2 (a greenhouse gas) than on partially oxidized DOM, which is likely a diverse group of compounds with poorly constrained roles in aquatic carbon cycling or biogeochemistry. The objective of this study is to address knowledge gaps on the prevalence, products, and pathways of DOM partial photo-oxidation. Here we traced the photochemical incorporation of isotopically labelled 18 O 2 into DOM isolated from Alaskan Arctic surface waters using high-resolution mass spectrometry. Complete and partial photo-oxidation of DOM was also quantified as CO 2 production and O 2 consumption. The majority of 18 O-containing partial oxidation photo-products were classified as carboxylic rich alicyclic molecules (CRAM) and overlapped in composition with previously reported photo-products known to result from the oxidation of DOM by singlet oxygen. These results support a previously proposed hypothesis that photo-oxidation by singlet oxygen may contribute to the formation of CRAM, a compound class of DOM ubiquitously observed in surface waters. The novel application of an isotopic tracer for oxygen incorporation with a mass balance approach to quantify complete and partial photo-oxidation of DOM revealed that less than one mol of O 2 is required to produce one mol of CO 2 . A sensitivity analysis based on this new knowledge demonstrated that the magnitude of DOM partial photo-oxidation may be underestimated by up to four-fold. Consequently, partial photo-oxidation likely plays a more prominent role in shaping DOM composition in sunlit waters of the Arctic than previously understood. Therefore, partial photo-oxidation should be increasingly incorporated into the experimental framework of studies focused on DOM composition in surface waters.

URLhttp://xlink.rsc.org/?DOI=C9EM00504H
DOI10.1039/C9EM00504H
Short TitleEnviron. Sci.: Processes Impacts