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Picky Eaters: Carbon isotopic evidence for the uniform bioavailability of riverine dissolved organic matter to a model marine microorganism
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  • Lea Baumser,
  • Lindsey Potts,
  • Brett D Walker,
  • Nagissa Mahmoudi
Lea Baumser
McGill University
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Lindsey Potts
McGill University
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Brett D Walker
University of California, Irvine
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Nagissa Mahmoudi
McGill University

Corresponding Author:[email protected]

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Abstract

Dissolved organic matter (DOM) is a key component of the global carbon cycle, with rivers delivering significant amounts of DOM to oceans. Urbanization and agricultural land-use alter the age and chemical composition of riverine DOM, which likely impact the downstream bioavailability of riverine DOM. Here, we use bioreactor incubations of a marine bacterium (Pseudoalteromonas sp. 3D05) to investigate DOM bioavailability from two distinct rivers: the Suwannee River (natural, non-urbanized), and the Upper Mississippi River Basin (anthropogenically influenced). We measured rates of microbial CO2 production and radiocarbon ages (as Δ14C) to assess bioavailable DOM remineralization. We observed nearly identical cell densities and degradation patterns for both riverine DOM incubations. Respired DOM Δ14C values were also similar and decreased over time indicative of preferential utilization of recently synthesized “modern” substrates. These findings reveal unexpected similarities in riverine DOM bioavailability, indicating similar short term biological reactivity despite large DOM compositional differences.
25 Mar 2024Submitted to ESS Open Archive
25 Mar 2024Published in ESS Open Archive