Flood plains play a potentially important
role in the global carbon cycle. The accumulation of
organic matter in flood plains often induces the
formation of chemically reduced groundwater and
sediments along riverbanks. In this study, our objective
is to evaluate the cumulative impact of such
reduced zones, water table fluctuations, and temperature
gradients on subsurface carbon fluxes in a flood
plain at Rifle, Colorado located along the Colorado
River. 2-D coupled variably-saturated, non-isothermal
flow and biogeochemical reactive transport modeling
was applied to improve our understanding of the
abiotic and microbially mediated reactions controlling
carbon dynamics at the Rifle site. Model simulations
considering only abiotic reactions (thus ignoring
microbial reactions) underestimated CO2 partial pressures
observed in the unsaturated zone and severely
underestimated inorganic (and overestimated organic)
carbon fluxes to the river compared to simulations
with biotic pathways. Both model simulations and
field observations highlighted the need to include
microbial contributions from chemolithoautotrophic
processes (e.g., Fe?2 and S-2 oxidation) to match
locally-observed high CO2 concentrations above
reduced zones. Observed seasonal variations in CO2
concentrations in the unsaturated zone could not be
reproduced without incorporating temperature gradients
in the simulations. Incorporating temperature
fluctuations resulted in an increase in the annual
groundwater carbon fluxes to the river by 170 % to
3.3 g m-2 d-1, while including water table variations
resulted in an overall decrease in the simulated fluxes.
We conclude that spatial microbial and redox zonation
as well as temporal fluctuations of temperature and
water table depth contribute significantly to subsurface
carbon fluxes in flood plains and need to be
represented appropriately in model simulations.
Revised: December 19, 2016 |
Published: February 12, 2016
Citation
Arora B., N. Spycher, N. Spycher, C. Steefel, S. Molins, M. Bill, and M.E. Conrad, et al. 2016.Influence of hydrological, biogeochemical and temperature transients on subsurface carbon fluxes in a flood plain environment.Biogeochemistry 127, no. 2:367-396.PNNL-SA-119410.doi:10.1007/s10533-016-0186-8