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Organic Carbon Flow in a Swamp‐Stream Ecosystem
Author(s) -
Mulholland Patrick J.
Publication year - 1981
Publication title -
ecological monographs
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 4.254
H-Index - 156
eISSN - 1557-7015
pISSN - 0012-9615
DOI - 10.2307/2937276
Subject(s) - swamp , environmental science , total organic carbon , ecosystem , dissolved organic carbon , organic matter , carbon fibers , hydrology (agriculture) , plant litter , carbon cycle , ecology , geology , biology , materials science , geotechnical engineering , composite number , composite material
An annual organic carbon budget is presented for an 8—km segment of Creeping Swamp, an undisturbed, third—order swamp—stream in the Coastal Plain of North Carolina, USA. Annual input of organic carbon (588 gC/m 2 ) was 96% allochthonous and was dominated by leaf litter inputs (36%) and fluvial, dissolved organic carbon (DOC) inputs (31%). Although the swamp—stream was primarily heterotrophic, autochthonous organic carbon input, primarily from filamentous algae, was important during February and March when primary production/ecosystem respiration (P/R) ratios of the flooded portions were near one. Annual output of organic carbon via fluvial processes (214 gC/m 2 , 95% as DOC, was 36% of total annual inputs, indicating that the swamp—stream segment ecosystem was 64% efficient at retaining organic carbon. Respiration (327 gC/m 2 ) accounted for most of this retention, or about 57% of annual inputs, and storage accounted for the remaining 7% of inputs. Organic carbon dynamics in the Creeping Swamp segment were compared to those reported for upland stream segments using indices of organic matter processing suggested by Fisher (1977) and a loading potential index suggested here. Creeping Swamp, while loading at a high rate, retains a much larger portion of its organic carbon inputs than two upland streams. Organic carbon loading potential in Creeping Swamp is very large, primarily because of its great width and complete canopy; however, its low gradient and dense vegetation enhance organic carbon retention, especially of coarse particulate organic carbon (COPC), by maintaining low water velocities with little erosive force, tortuous flow pathways, and debris dams. Most of the retention and oxidation of organic carbon in the flooded Creeping Swamp ecosystem takes place in the floodplain. It is suggested that floodplain exchanges should also be considered in budgets of higher gradient rivers and streams. Despite the high degree of retention and oxidation of organic inputs to Creeping Swamp, there is a net annual fluvial export of 21 gC/m 2 , mostly in the dissolved form. Watersheds drained by swamp—streams in the southeastern United States are thought to have large organic carbon exports compared to upland forested drainages, because the stream network covers a much greater proportion of the total watershed area.