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Recycling and deposition of inorganic carbon from calcium carbonate encrustations of charophytes.

Authors :
Strzałek, Małgorzata
Kufel, Lech
Apolinarska, Karina
Becher, Marcin
Biardzka, Elżbieta
Brzozowski, Michał
Kiełczewski, Rafał
Kowalewski, Grzegorz
Pukacz, Andrzej
Woszczyk, Michał
Pełechaty, Mariusz
Source :
Limnology & Oceanography; Feb2024, Vol. 69 Issue 2, p279-289, 11p
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Many aquatic primary producers can use bicarbonates as a carbon source for photosynthesis. Charophytes of the two genera: Chara and Nitellopsis are quite efficient in this process. Some species of these macroalgae produce carbonate encrustations, mainly calcium carbonate, constituting up to 86% of the summer maximum dry weight of the standing crop. In this study, we analyzed the fate of inorganic carbon accumulated this way in Chara spp. and Nitellopsis obtusa from six Polish lakes located in two regions (warmer W Poland and cooler NE Poland). Our study distinguished two groups of charophyte species that differed in the way of CaCO3 release from their summer standing crops. On average, the corticate Chara rudis and C. tomentosa belonging to the first group were less efficient in depositing CaCO3 from summer to autumn than the less corticate C. contraria and ecorticate N. obtusa of the second group. The latter two species were more efficient in inorganic carbon burial in sediments. On the contrary, dissolution of encrustation was more typical of the first species group and was facilitated by decreasing the pH and saturation index of calcite in lake water. The final output of CaCO3 loss mainly resulted from combined species‐specific features, lake water properties and overwintering patterns. Our study revealed that inorganic carbon cycling through charophytes involves burial and dissolution and is more complex than previously thought. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00243590
Volume :
69
Issue :
2
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Limnology & Oceanography
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
175567392
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1002/lno.12479