Data di Pubblicazione:
2019
Abstract:
Coastal systems represent primary receptors of land-derived nutrients and pollutants, thus playing a crucial role
in carbon burial and marine productivity processes. A closer look into potential effects of river floods and following
seawater quality modifications is fundamental to specifically explore the links between the marine contamination
patterns and the planktonic microbial processes involved in carbon fluxes. Here we investigated the
effects of an extreme flood event (8603m3 s-1) from a large river (Po River, Italy) on the physical and chemical
seawater properties, along with the responses of phytoplanktonic and heterotrophic microbial communities to
riverine inputs. Following a multidisciplinary oceanographic survey conducted across three sampling transects
perpendicular to the Italian coastline, marine waters differently impacted by the river flood could be discriminated
according to the variation patterns of relevant seawater properties (i.e., temperature, salinity, dissolved
oxygen, total suspended matter). The concentrations of major nutrients and the organic matter composition (i.e.,
particulate and dissolved organic carbon, stable carbon isotopic composition, chromophoric dissolved organic
matter) were significantly higher in waters at high river flood impact levels. The total dissolved organic carbon
and the concentrations of selected inorganic and organic pollutants (i.e., heavy metals and polycyclic aromatic
hydrocarbons) were unaltered by riverine inputs, showing values similar or lower than those reported at regular
flow conditions. Moreover, the phytoplanktonic and heterotrophic microbial communities showed significant
changes linked to river flood, as revealed by a net increase of Chlorophyll-b concentrations (related to the occurrence
of freshwater algal taxa), higher prokaryotic C production rates, and shorter prokaryotic cell turnover
times in highly impacted waters. In conclusion, our results showed that an extreme river flood event could represent
a source of energy for the microbial metabolism involved in OM transformation processes, with consequences
on the microbially-driven C-flux and to the overall productivity of coastal marine systems.
Tipologia CRIS:
01.01 Articolo in rivista
Keywords:
EXTREME EVENTS; RIVERINE DISCHARGE; COASTAL WATERS; CONTAMINATION PATTERNS; MICROBIAL FUNCTIONING; C-CYCLING
Elenco autori:
Bensi, Manuel; Patrolecco, Luisa; Amalfitano, Stefano; Casentini, Barbara; Campanelli, Alessandra; Bongiorni, Lucia; Ademollo, Nicoletta; Zoppini, Annamaria
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