Spatial and Temporal Variability in the Amount and Source of Dissolved Organic Carbon: Implications for Ultraviolet Exposure in Amphibian Habitats

被引:0
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作者
Paul D. Brooks
Catherine M. O’Reilly
Stephen A. Diamond
Don H. Campbell
Roland Knapp
David Bradford
Paul Stephen Corn
Blake Hossack
Kathy Tonnessen
机构
[1] University of Arizona,Hydrology and Water Resources
[2] Vassar College,Department of Biology
[3] US Enviromental Protection Agency National Health and Environmental Effects Research Laboratory,Office of Research and Development
[4] US Geological Survey,Water Resources Division
[5] University of California,Sierra Nevada Aquatic Research Laboratory
[6] US Enviromental Protection Agency,Office of Research and Development
[7] US Geological Survey,Northern Rocky Mountain Science Center
[8] Aldo Leopold Wilderness Research Institute,National Park Service
[9] Rocky Mountains Cooperative Ecosystem Studies Unit,undefined
[10] School of Forestry,undefined
[11] University of Montana,undefined
来源
Ecosystems | 2005年 / 8卷
关键词
dissolved organic carbon; ultraviolet radiation; ultraviolet-B; amphibians; national parks;
D O I
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中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
The amount, chemical composition, and source of dissolved organic carbon (DOC), together with in situ ultraviolet (UV-B) attenuation, were measured at 1–2 week intervals throughout the summers of 1999, 2000, and 2001 at four sites in Rocky Mountain National Park (Colorado). Eight additional sites, four in Sequoia and Kings Canyon National Park/John Muir Wilderness (California) and four in Glacier National Park (Montana), were sampled during the summer of 2000. Attenuation of UV-B was significantly related to DOC concentrations over the three years in Rocky Mountain (R2 = 0.39, F = 25.71, P < 0.0001) and across all parks in 2000 (R2 = 0.44, F = 38.25, P < 0.0001). The relatively low R2 values, however, reflect significant temporal and spatial variability in the specific attenuation per unit DOC. Fluorescence analysis of the fulvic acid DOC fraction (roughly 600–2,000 Daltons) indicated that the source of DOC significantly affected the attenuation of UV-B. Sites in Sequoia–Kings Canyon were characterized by DOC derived primarily from algal sources and showed much deeper UV-B penetration, whereas sites in Glacier and Rocky Mountain contained a mix of algal and terrestrial DOC-dominated sites, with more terrestrially dominated sites characterized by greater UV-B attenuation per unit DOC. In general, site characteristics that promoted the accumulation of terrestrially derived DOC showed greater attenuation of UV-B per unit DOC; however, catchment vegetation and soil characteristics, precipitation, and local hydrology interacted to make it difficult to predict potential exposure from DOC concentrations.
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页码:478 / 487
页数:9
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