Authors: | Thomas, CA; Bendell-Young, LI |
Year: | 1999 |
Journal: | Estuarine Coastal and Shelf Science 48: 635-647 |
Title: | The significance of diagenesis versus riverine input in contributing to the sediment geochemical matrix of iron and manganese in an intertidal region |
Abstract: | Summer porewater and spring and summer surficial sediment samples were collected from 26 locations in the intertidal region of the Eraser River estuary. Porewaters were analysed for dissolved iron and manganese las defined by species <0.2 mu m in diameter) to assess the contribution of diagenesis to concentrations of iron and manganese oxides at the sediment-water interface. Surficial sediment samples were geochemically characterized as: % organic matter (% LOI); reducible iron (RED Fe, iron oxides) and easily reducible manganese (ER Mn, manganese oxides). Grain size at each site was also determined. The sediment geochemical matrix, as defined by the above four parameters, was highly heterogeneous throughout the intertidal region (three-way ANOVA; P<0.0001). For RED Fe and ER Mn, this heterogeneity could be explained by either diagenetic processes (RED Fe) or by a combination of the proximity of the sample sites to the mouth of the Eraser River estuary plus diagenetic processes (ER Mn). Correlation (Spearman Rank Correlation Test (r(s)), of dissolved iron within the subsurface sediments with amounts of RED Fe recovered from the associated surface sediments was highly significant (r(s)=0.80, P<0.0001); high concentrations of RED Fe at the sediment-water interface co-occurred with high concentrations of dissolved iron, regardless of the proximity of the sample locations to riverine input. Compared with iron, the relationship between dissolved manganese and ER Mn from surface sediments was lower (r(s)=0.58; P<0.0008). Locations most strongly influenced by the Fraser River contained greater concentrations of ER Mn at the sediment-water interface than that which would be expected based on the contribution from diagenesis alone. Sediment grain size and organic matter were also influenced by the proximity ro riverine input. Surficial sediment of sites close to the river mouth were comprised primarily of percent silt (2.0 mu m-50 mu m) whereas sites not influenced by riverine input were primarily percent sand (grain size >50 mu m). Concentrations of organic matter declined from the mouth to the foreslope of the estuary. With the exception of RED Fe, temporal variation (May vs July) was insignificant (P>0.05, three-way ANOVA). Concentrations of RED Fe recovered from the surficial sediments were in general greater in the summer vs spring months, although spring and summer values were highly correlated (Pearson Product Moment Correlation Coefficient; PPCC; r=0.89; P<0.0001). As the bioavailability of metals is dependent on sediment geochemistry, availability throughout the intertidal region will also be spatially dependent. This heterogeneity needs to be taken into account in studies addressing the impact of metals on estuarine systems. (C) 1999 Academic Press. |
Please send suggestions for improving this publication database to
sass-support@sfu.ca.
Departmental members may update their publication list.