Interactions between trace elements and dissolved organic matter in the stagnant anoxic deep layer of a meromictic lake

Citation
P. Alberic et al., Interactions between trace elements and dissolved organic matter in the stagnant anoxic deep layer of a meromictic lake, LIMN OCEAN, 45(5), 2000, pp. 1088-1096
Citations number
45
Categorie Soggetti
Aquatic Sciences
Journal title
LIMNOLOGY AND OCEANOGRAPHY
ISSN journal
00243590 → ACNP
Volume
45
Issue
5
Year of publication
2000
Pages
1088 - 1096
Database
ISI
SICI code
0024-3590(200007)45:5<1088:IBTEAD>2.0.ZU;2-W
Abstract
About 80% and more than 90% of the dissolved organic carbon (DOC) in the bo ttom water of Lake Pavin were isolated, respectively, on Amberlite XAD and Spherodex DEAE resins. Trace element concentrations in the fractions isolat ed were analyzed by using ICP-MS. Uranium, molybdenum, and antimony were fo und to be about 40% associated with fulvic and hydrophilic acids adsorbed o n XAD resins at pH 2, the metal-organic association being not dissociated. Much higher percentages of the same elements, plus vanadium, were adsorbed on the DEAE resin at the pH of natural water possibly because of the better preservation of acid labile organic complexes or of the supplementary adso rption of inorganic compounds. Ultrafiltration and dialysis made it possibl e to exclude colloidal fractions together with much U (78%), Mo (80%), V (5 5%), and DOC (65%). These elements and many others (including barium) were previously found to be quite reactive at the bottom of the lake, (apparentl y being scavenged by settling particles, which are mostly diatoms, then dis solved at the sediment-water interface). Conversely, trace elements with a conservative behavior in the bottom layer (such as lithium and cesium) were not found associated with dissolved organic mater (DOM). Barium was not st rongly associated with the extractable (DOM), which may argue for a direct interaction with inorganic particles or the existence of very labile comple xes, Our work suggests the existence of relatively stable (nonacid labile) U and Mo-DOM colloidal associations in the anoxic bottom waters of the lake and their importance in the scavenging of those metals.