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1.
Sci Total Environ ; 700: 134392, 2020 Jan 15.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31704513

RESUMEN

Estuaries worldwide are undergoing changes to patterns of aquatic productivity because of human activities that alter flow, impact sediment delivery and thus the light field, and contribute nutrients and contaminants like pesticides and metals. These changes can influence phytoplankton communities, which in turn can alter estuarine food webs. We used multiple approaches-including high-resolution water quality mapping, synoptic sampling, productivity and nitrogen uptake rates, Lagrangian parcel tracking, enclosure experiments and bottle incubations-over a short time period to take a "spatial snapshot" of conditions in the northern region of the San Francisco Estuary (California, USA) to examine how environmental drivers like light availability, nutrients, water residence time, and contaminants affect phytoplankton abundance and community attributes like size distribution, taxonomic structure, and nutrient uptake rates. Zones characterized by longer residence time (15-60 days) had higher chlorophyll-a concentrations (9 ±â€¯4 µg L-1) and were comprised primarily of small phytoplankton cells (<5 µm, 74 ±â€¯8%), lower ammonium concentrations (1 ±â€¯0.8 µM), higher nitrate uptake rates, and higher rates of potential carbon productivity. Conversely, zones characterized by shorter residence time (1-14 days) had higher ammonium concentration (13 ±â€¯5 µM) and lower chlorophyll-a concentration (5 ±â€¯1 µg L-1) with diatoms making up a larger percent contribution. Longer residence time, however, did not result in the accumulation of large (>5 µm) cells considered important to pelagic food webs. Rather, longer residence time zones had a phytoplankton community comprised primarily of small cells, particularly picocyanobacteria that made up 38 ±â€¯17% of the chlorophyll-a - nearly double the concentration seen in shorter residence time zones (22 ±â€¯7% picocyanobacterial of chlorophyll-a). Our results suggest that water residence time in estuaries may have an effect as large or larger than that experimentally demonstrated for light, contaminants, or nutrients.


Asunto(s)
Ecosistema , Cadena Alimentaria , Fitoplancton/crecimiento & desarrollo , Compuestos de Amonio , Clorofila A , Diatomeas , Monitoreo del Ambiente , Estuarios , Agua Dulce , Nitrógeno/análisis , San Francisco , Calidad del Agua
2.
Chemosphere ; 217: 496-506, 2019 Feb.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30439661

RESUMEN

Mercury (Hg) pollution is a concern to human and wildlife health worldwide, and management strategies that reduce Hg inputs to aquatic systems are of broad interest. Using a replicated field-scale study in California's Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta, we tested the effectiveness of chemically enhanced treatment wetlands (CETWs) under two coagulation treatments, polyaluminum chloride (Al treatment) and ferric sulfate (Fe treatment), in their initial removal and longer-term sequestration of Hg compared to untreated control wetlands. The primary mechanism for Hg removal by CETWs was the transfer of Hg from filtered forms to insoluble particulate forms and enhanced settling of particles. CETWs resulted in total Hg annual load removals of 63 ng m-2 yr-1 (71%) and 54 ng m-2 yr-1 (54%) for the Al and Fe treatments, respectively. Control wetlands removed significantly less at 13 ng m-2 yr-1 (14%). Load removals indicate that Fe treatment wetlands more effectively reduced filtered and total methylmercury (MeHg) exports, while Al treatment wetlands more effectively reduced particulate MeHg and total Hg exports. These differences in Hg species load reductions possibly indicate different mechanisms of Hg sequestration; current data suggest more effective floc formation and particle settling was likely responsible for the Al treatment behavior, while either preferential MeHg sequestration or methylation suppression was potentially responsible for Fe treatment behavior. Differences in Hg sequestration behavior post-coagulation between the flocs formed by different coagulants indicate the importance of in-situ studies and the need for careful selection of coagulant treatment depending on the Hg species requiring remediation.


Asunto(s)
Monitoreo del Ambiente/métodos , Mercurio/química , Contaminación Ambiental , Humanos , Mercurio/análisis , Humedales
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