Technical note: Uncovering the influence of methodological variations on the extractability of iron-bound organic carbon
Association of organic carbon (OC) with reactive iron (FeR) represents an important mechanism by which OC is protected against remineralisation in soils and marine sediments. Recent studies indicate that the molecular structure of organic compounds and/or the identity of associated FeR phases exert...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Biogeosciences 2021-06, Vol.18 (11), p.3409-3419 |
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Zusammenfassung: | Association of organic carbon (OC) with reactive iron (FeR) represents
an important mechanism by which OC is protected against remineralisation in
soils and marine sediments. Recent studies indicate that the molecular
structure of organic compounds and/or the identity of associated FeR
phases exert a control on the ability of an OC–FeR complex to be
extracted by the citrate–bicarbonate–dithionite (CBD) method. However, many
variations of the CBD extraction are used, and these are often uncalibrated
to each other, rendering comparisons of OC–FeR values extracted via the
different methods impossible. Here, we created synthetic ferrihydrite
samples coprecipitated with simple organic structures and subjected these to
modifications of the most common CBD method. We altered some of the method
parameters (reagent concentration, time of the extraction and sample
preparation methods) and measured FeR recovery to determine which (if
any) modifications affected the release of FeR from the synthetic
sample. We provide an assessment of the reducing capacity of Na dithionite
in the CBD method (the amount of Fe reduced by a fixed amount of dithionite)
and find that the concentration of dithionite deployed can limit OC–FeR
extractability for sediments with a high FeR content. Additionally, we
show that extending the length of any CBD extraction offers no benefit in
removing FeR. Moreover, we demonstrate that for synthetic OC–FeR
samples dominated by ferrihydrite, freeze-drying samples can significantly
reduce OC–FeR extractability; this appears to be less of an issue for
natural marine sediments where natural ageing mechanisms may mimic the
freeze-drying process for more stable Fe phases. While our study is not an
all-inclusive method comparison and is not aimed at delivering the
“perfect” extraction setup, our findings provide a collected summary of
critical factors which influence the efficiency of the CBD extraction for
OC–FeR. As such, we provide a platform from which OC–FeR values
obtained under different methods can be interpreted and future studies of
sediment carbon cycling can build upon. |
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ISSN: | 1726-4189 1726-4170 1726-4189 |
DOI: | 10.5194/bg-18-3409-2021 |