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1.
Estuar Coast Shelf Sci ; 2332020 Feb 05.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33888922

RESUMO

Salt marsh hydrology presents many difficulties from a measurement and modeling standpoint: bi-directional flows of tidal waters, variable water densities due to mixing of fresh and salt water, significant influences from vegetation, and complex stream morphologies. Because of these difficulties, there is still much room for development of a truly mechanistic model of salt marsh groundwater and surface-water hydrology. This in turn creates an obstacle for simulating other marsh processes, such as nutrient cycling, that rely heavily on hydrology as a biogeochemical control and as a mode of nutrient transport. As a solution, we have used water level data collected from a well transect in Winant Slough, a mesotidal salt marsh on the Oregon coast, to create and calibrate a simple, empirical dynamic marsh hydrology model with few parameters. The model predicts the response of a marsh's water table level to tides and precipitation as a function of surface elevation and distance from tidal channel. Validation was conducted using additional well data from a separate transect in Winant Slough (achieving a standard error of 2.5 cm) and from two other mesotidal marshes in Tillamook Bay, Oregon (achieving standard errors of 3.1 cm and 3.6 cm). Inundation frequencies of the top 10 cm of soil were estimated from model outputs to be 18.3 % of a 14.8-day tidal cycle for the area closest to the tidal creek and 59.3 % for the area furthest from the creek. Model outputs were also used to predict the amount of soil pore space available to receive incoming tide water in Winant Slough, finding the volume available to range from 12.5 % to 24.7 % of the incoming marsh tidal prism volume, depending on the maximum tide height. Incrementally increasing sea level rise scenarios ranging from 15 cm to 75 cm predicted an exponential decrease in soil pore space available to receive incoming tidal water and an approximately linear increase in inundation frequency of the top 10 cm of soil; this substantial change in hydrology would impact the marsh's ability to process incoming water and could alter the zonation of vegetation. The model is relatively easy to apply to salt marshes and can provide informative hydrology predictions to land managers, ecologists, and biogeochemists who may not have the time or expertise required to apply more complex models.

2.
Nat Biotechnol ; 20(8): 821-5, 2002 Aug.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-12091916

RESUMO

In many marine environments, a voltage gradient exists across the water sediment interface resulting from sedimentary microbial activity. Here we show that a fuel cell consisting of an anode embedded in marine sediment and a cathode in overlying seawater can use this voltage gradient to generate electrical power in situ. Fuel cells of this design generated sustained power in a boat basin carved into a salt marsh near Tuckerton, New Jersey, and in the Yaquina Bay Estuary near Newport, Oregon. Retrieval and analysis of the Tuckerton fuel cell indicates that power generation results from at least two anode reactions: oxidation of sediment sulfide (a by-product of microbial oxidation of sedimentary organic carbon) and oxidation of sedimentary organic carbon catalyzed by microorganisms colonizing the anode. These results demonstrate in real marine environments a new form of power generation that uses an immense, renewable energy reservoir (sedimentary organic carbon) and has near-immediate application.


Assuntos
Bactérias/metabolismo , Fontes de Energia Bioelétrica/microbiologia , Microbiologia Ambiental , Sedimentos Geológicos/microbiologia , Bactérias/classificação , Bactérias/genética , Biotecnologia/métodos , Carbono/metabolismo , Conservação de Recursos Energéticos/métodos , DNA Ribossômico/análise , DNA Ribossômico/genética , Eletricidade , Eletrodos , Dados de Sequência Molecular , New Jersey , Oceanos e Mares , Oregon , Oxirredução , RNA Bacteriano/análise , RNA Bacteriano/genética , RNA Ribossômico 16S/genética , Sulfetos/metabolismo
3.
Environ Sci Technol ; 41(22): 7895-900, 2007 Nov 15.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18075105

RESUMO

We describe a new chamber-based benthic microbial fuel cell (BMFC) that incorporates a suspended, high surface area and semi-enclosed anode to improve performance. In Yaquina Bay, OR, two chambered BMFC prototypes generated current continuously for over 200 days. One BMFC was pumped intermittently, which produced power densities more than an order of magnitude greater than those achieved by previous BMFCs with single buried graphite-plate anodes. On average, the continuous power densities with pumping were 233 mW/m2 (2.3 W/m3); peak values were 380 mW/m2 (3.8 W/m3), and performance improved over the time of the deployments. Without pumping, high power densities could similarly be achieved after either BMFC was allowed to rest at open circuit. A third chambered BMFC with a 0.4 m2 footprint was deployed at a cold seep in Monterey Canyon, CA to test the new design in an environment with natural advection. The power density increased 5-fold (140 mW/m2 vs 28 mW/m2) when low-pressure check valves allowed unidirectional flow through the chamber.


Assuntos
Biodegradação Ambiental , Fontes de Energia Bioelétrica , Biofilmes , Eletroquímica/métodos , Eliminação de Resíduos Líquidos/métodos , Bactérias Anaeróbias , Reatores Biológicos , Carbono/química , Conservação de Recursos Energéticos , Difusão , Fontes de Energia Elétrica , Eletricidade , Eletrodos , Desenho de Equipamento , Sedimentos Geológicos/química , Modelos Químicos , Oregon , Oxigênio/metabolismo
4.
Appl Environ Microbiol ; 73(21): 7029-40, 2007 Nov.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17766447

RESUMO

The decomposition of marine plankton in two-chamber, seawater-filled microbial fuel cells (MFCs) has been investigated and related to resulting chemical changes, electrode potentials, current efficiencies, and microbial diversity. Six experiments were run at various discharge potentials, and a seventh served as an open-circuit control. The plankton consisted of a mixture of freshly captured phytoplankton and zooplankton (0.21 to 1 mm) added at an initial batch concentration of 27.5 mmol liter(-1) particulate organic carbon (OC). After 56.7 days, between 19.6 and 22.2% of the initial OC remained, sulfate reduction coupled to OC oxidation accounted for the majority of the OC that was degraded, and current efficiencies (of the active MFCs) were between 11.3 and 15.5%. In the open-circuit control cell, anaerobic plankton decomposition (as quantified by the decrease in total OC) could be modeled by three terms: two first-order reaction rate expressions (0.79 day(-1) and 0.037 day(-1), at 15 degrees C) and one constant, no-reaction term (representing 10.6% of the initial OC). However, in each active MFC, decomposition rates increased during the third week, lagging just behind periods of peak electricity generation. We interpret these decomposition rate changes to have been due primarily to the metabolic activity of sulfur-reducing microorganisms at the anode, a finding consistent with the electrochemical oxidization of sulfide to elemental sulfur and the elimination of inhibitory effects of dissolved sulfide. Representative phylotypes, found to be associated with anodes, were allied with Delta-, Epsilon-, and Gammaproteobacteria as well as the Flavobacterium-Cytophaga-Bacteroides and Fusobacteria. Based upon these results, we posit that higher current efficiencies can be achieved by optimizing plankton-fed MFCs for direct electron transfer from organic matter to electrodes, including microbial precolonization of high-surface-area electrodes and pulsed flowthrough additions of biomass.


Assuntos
Fenômenos Fisiológicos Bacterianos , Fontes de Energia Bioelétrica , Reatores Biológicos , Desenho de Equipamento , Fontes de Energia Bioelétrica/microbiologia , Eletricidade , Eletrodos , Transporte de Elétrons , Cinética , Plâncton/crescimento & desenvolvimento , Água do Mar
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