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Megan Kelly and Hilairy Hartnett April 19, 2008
Temporal Changes in Dissolved Organic Carbon Composition in Tempe Town Lake Megan Kelly and Hilairy Hartnett April 19, 2008
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Conceptual Diagram Evaporation Salt River Output to Salt River Rain
Tempe Town Lake Output to Salt River Rain Run-off 2004: significant Winter rainfall Infiltration Recharge Wells Dams Lowered 31 Dec 2004 W. Dam Raised 18 Feb 2005 E. Dam Raised 4 Apr 2005 Monsoon begins 18 Jul 2005 Monsoon ends 10 Sep 2005
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Dissolved Organic Carbon
Produced by photosynthesis Altered or removed by microbial respiration Photosynthesis CO2 + H2O “CH2O” + O2 Respiration Altered or removed by photo-degradation Adsorbs to particles Removed by flocculation
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Methods Sampling: 2005 - daily 2006 & 2007 - bimonthly Measurements:
pH, conductivity, temperature, dissolved O2 DOC analysis: Bulk concentration Molecular level composition
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Conductivity (μS)
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Conductivity (μS)
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Electrospray Ionization Mass Spectrometry
Soft ionization using electric field Two modes: Positive mode Negative mode In: Sample diluted with methanol and water Out: Abundance of peaks of nominal masses corresponding to masses of compounds
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High Flow Period February + February - Rainy Period August + August -
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# of compounds present in high-flow period
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High-flow period Evaporative period
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High-flow period Evaporative period Rainy period
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Conclusions Water chemistry indicates evaporation and primary production are dominant processes Bulk DOC concentration indicates microbial respiration or photo-degradation ESI-MS data suggest that different processes may dominate over time
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Future Work Comparison of mass spectrometry data before and after winter and summer rain events and algaecide applications Experiments to determine individual compounds produced by photosynthesis, microbial degradation, and photo degradation
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Thanks to: Brad Brown, Katie Mayer, Nic Dionisio, Hilary Waterman, Jessie Shipp for sampling Katie Alexander for discussions Peggy Nelson and students of COURS 2007 for insights Barrett Honors College, CAP-LTER, and ASU/NASA Space Grant for funding This material is based upon work supported by the National Science Foundation under Grant No. DEB , Central Arizona - Phoenix Long-Term Ecological Research (CAP LTER). Any opinions, findings and conclusions or recommendation expressed in this material are those of the author(s) and do not necessarily reflect the views of the National Science Foundation (NSF).
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