Skip to main navigation Skip to search Skip to main content

The effect of biogenic irrigation intensity and solute exchange of diagenetic reaction rates in marine sediments

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

372 Scopus citations

Abstract

The activities of infaunal macrobenthos strongly influence the pathways, rates, and extent of organic matter remineralization and associated reactions in marine sediments. Solute transport during irrigation is a particularly important process that stimulates microbial activity and net remineralization, both within and adjacent to the bioturbated zone. Part of the stimulation proximal to the bioturbated zone is due to redox oscillation and oxidant supply during transport, but part of both the near and far-field effects are a result of other factors. Experiments designed to simulate different degrees of diffusive exchange, and thus infaunal abudances or activity, demonstrate a regular and strong dependence of anaerobic remineralization on diffusive transport. Forexample, net production of NH4+, HPO4(=),I(=), and Mn++ increases as the effective distance between burrows becomes ≤2 cm (burrow abundance ≥ 800 m-2) in otherwise identical anoxic sediment. Corresponding changes in sedimentary bacterial numbers, exoenzyme activity, per cell growth rate (RNA), and solid phase properties (N, C/N,P) indicate that the increases in net rates are due in part to an absolute increase in total production. Transport-reaction models and experimental results demonstrate that relative decreases in the uptake of solutes into biomass, abiogenic precipitation reactions, and increased removal of inhibiting metabolites all occur simultaneously, enhancing both total and net remineralization. The phenonomenological first-order rate constant for organic matter decomposition is therefore a function not only of the reductant and oxidant pool properties, but also the environmental transport regime. Solid phase reaction products can differ substantially as a function of diffusive openness. For example, both organic P and the organic P/inorganic P ratio increase in morre diffusively-open (irrigated) compared to diffusively-closed, anoxic sediment. The sensitivity of solute concentrations, microbial activity and diagenetic reaction balances to diffusive transport regime, indicates that macrofauna can functionally manipulate these properties through relatively small changes in burrow spacing patterns and individual burrow geometries.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)905-936
Number of pages32
JournalJournal of Marine Research
Volume56
Issue number4
DOIs
StatePublished - 1998

Keywords

  • Diagenesis
  • Diffusion
  • Marine sediment
  • Microbial activity
  • Sediment chemistry
  • Solute transport
  • Transport process

Fingerprint

Dive into the research topics of 'The effect of biogenic irrigation intensity and solute exchange of diagenetic reaction rates in marine sediments'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

Cite this