Translate

Mostrando entradas con la etiqueta Project J-AIL 2013-2014. Mostrar todas las entradas
Mostrando entradas con la etiqueta Project J-AIL 2013-2014. Mostrar todas las entradas

domingo, 2 de diciembre de 2018

Climate determines the role of rivers in carbon processing


We are glad to present the latest work of the DOMIPEX project, where they show that climate determines the role of rivers in the carbon cycle. The article, recently published in the journal Global Biogeochemical Cycles, in the study, the authors have found that climate conditions the ability of rivers to degrade organic matter and recycle the nutrients of water, one of the main ecosystem services of rivers.
You can find an entrance in Ecomandanga as well!

Rivers play a fundamental role in carbon cycling
Rivers and streams are fascinating elements of the landscape. They transport water and materials connecting the entire watershed, from the mountains to the sea. But rivers are not simple passive pipes. During the journey downstream, rivers transform the materials they transport, which can accumulate in aquatic organisms and sediments or become gases, such as carbon dioxide (CO2) and methane (CH4). One of the main materials that come from terrestrial ecosystems and reach rivers and streams is organic matter (for example, leaves and branches from the surrounding vegetation), rich in carbon, which serves as indispensable food for fluvial organisms, such as bacteria and fungi. Thus, the rivers, and especially the smaller streams, are very active systems where a multitude of biogeochemical reactions take place and with a great capacity for processing the organic matter that reaches them, which is why they play a key role in the cycle of carbon.

DOMIPEX: a collaborative project to study the role of headwater streams in the carbon cycle
In this study, researchers explore how rivers process dissolved organic matter along a broad biogeographical gradient, from the humid forests of southern Germany and Switzerland to the semi-arid areas of Murcia. To carry out a study of this kind, which covers such a wide geographical area simultaneously, we were fortunate to have the support of the first call for collaborative studies of the Iberian Limnology Association for young researchers.
Initially, the young researchers of the association who decided to get involved sampled 11 different rivers during two periods (summer and autumn 2014) using a common protocol. The experiment consisted of the addition of acetate, a compound similar to sugar, and nitrate to determine the rates of consumption of organic matter of the river by the microbial aquatic community. To measure the capacity of aquatic microbes to consume these compounds, they measured how the concentration of acetate and nitrate decreased after their experimental addition in the river. Thus, when the concentration of added acetate decreases rapidly, it indicates that microbes have a high capacity to degrade organic matter. Additionally, daily cycles of dissolved oxygen measurements were performed, which allowed to calculate the capacity of these rivers to produce (primary production) and consume organic matter (respiration), which together give us information on the ecosystem metabolism. Finally, the groups that participated in the project took water samples that were analyzed to identify the type of organic compounds dissolved in streams water, to see if there were differences between rivers in humid and arid zones.

The results of this work indicate that the differences in the type of organic matter and its processing in rivers depend on the biogeographic area where the river is located and its climate. In general, in rivers located in more rainy areas, the dissolved organic matter was composed of molecules of humic type, that is, long aromatic and colored molecules, such as lignin or cellulose, from plant material from the forests of the catchment.
The microbial organisms of rivers located in rainy areas seem to depend on this type of humic organic matter, as indicated by fluvial metabolism values. On the other hand, in the most southerly and arid rivers, with scarce rainfall, organic matter was mostly composed of smaller, protein-like molecules that have probably been produced upstream within the river itself by microbes, algae or macrophytes. This coincides with a higher primary production in these warmer rivers. At the same time, rivers process organic matter (acetate) very differently depending on the climate. Thus, the rivers of arid zones are able to consume much more acetate than the rivers of northern Europe, because in natural conditions, the rivers of more arid areas receive very little contributions of organic matter of terrestrial origin due to the lower presence of trees and organic matter in the soil.

This study has been a pioneer in determining the relationship between the type of dissolved organic matter, its process and the ecosystem metabolism in streams of different regions. In this way, we can better understand how rivers process the organic matter they receive from terrestrial ecosystems. This information is essential to highlight the key role that aquatic ecosystems have in the carbon cycle, and to predict the effects of global change on the functioning of ecosystems.

This work has been possible thanks to the illusion and the coordinated effort of a group of young researchers, who believe in the value of collaboration to face the challenges of global change, to which ecology, environmental sciences and society in general are currently facing.

Complete paper:
N. Catalán, J. P. Casas-Ruiz, M. I. Arce, M. Abril, A. G. Bravo , R. del Campo, E. Estévez, A. Freixa, P. Giménez-Grau, A. M. González-Ferreras , Ll. Gómez-Gener, A. Lupon, A. Martínez, C. Palacin-Lizarbe , S. Poblador, R. Rasines-Ladero, M. Reyes , T. Rodríguez-Castillo, P. Rodríguez-Lozano, I. Sanpera-Calbet, I. Tornero, and A. Pastor. 2018. Behind the Scenes: Mechanisms Regulating Climatic Patterns of Dissolved Organic Carbon Uptake in Headwater Streams. Global Biogeochemical Cycles. https://doi.org/10.1029/2018GB005919

domingo, 18 de junio de 2017

DOMIPEX project: collaborative research meet large-scale stream ecology

El pasado mes se publicó en Limnetica – 36 (1): 67-85 (2017) el primer artículo derivado del proyecto colaborativo entre Jóvenes AIL, DOMIPEX, titulado “Local and regional drivers of headwater streams metabolism: insights from the first AIL collaborative project”. Sus autores, un equipo multidisciplinar formado por 35 limnólogas y limnológos de mas de 7 paises, han preparado un resumen para el blog J-AIL.




Los ecosistemas fluviales tienen un papel esencial a la hora de vertebrar el paisaje, a parte de la continuidad longitudinal aguas abajo, están altamente conectados con los sistemas terrestres adyacentes donde hay un intercambio constante de energía y materiales.  Por ello, cuando definimos un ecosistema fluvial hay que considerar tanto la biota presente como las interacciones biológicas, físicas y químicas que tienen lugar. Este conjunto de interacciones es el que determina el funcionamiento del sistema, es decir, los flujos de materia y energía. Un método integrador de estudiar el funcionamiento de los ríos es a través del metabolismo fluvial.  Este consiste básicamente en la medida del intercambio de oxígeno entre la biota y su medio y cuenta con dos descriptores básicos: por un lado, la producción primaria bruta (PPB), que es la generación de oxígeno por la comunidad autotrófica del río y por otro, la respiración del ecosistema (RE), que es el consumo de oxígeno por parte de todos los organismos fluviales.

En este trabajo nos preguntamos: ¿Qué factores controlan el metabolismo de un río? ¿Varían entre regiones o estaciones? Para responder esas preguntas, es necesario estudiar el río como parte de la cuenca hidrográfica, y así, plantear en qué medida el paisaje y el clima afectan a su funcionamiento. Tener información sobre ríos muy diversos geográficamente es fundamental a la hora de entender los factores que controlan el metabolismo a escala global.

El primer experimento colaborativo convocado por la AIL nos ofreció la oportunidad de colaborar con grupos de jóvenes de diferentes áreas geográficas. En total, se muestrearon diez ríos de cabecera en los meses de verano y otoño en varias bioregiones climáticas desde el sur de Alemania al sur de España. En dichos ríos, se determinó la magnitud y variabilidad de la PPB y la RE mediante el método de canal abierto. Asimismo, se examinaron los factores climáticos, hidrológicos y físico-químicos que potencialmente pueden afectar las tasas metabólicas fluviales.
Los ríos estudiados presentaron valores muy contrastados – un valor de PPB entre 0.06 y 4.33 g O2 m–2 día–1 y un valor de RE de 0.72 y 14.20 g O2 m–2 día–1 –. No obstante, a excepción del río más meridional, todos ellos presentaron tasas más altas de respiración que de producción. Dicho resultado sugiere que los ríos de cabecera muestreados se abastecen mayoritariamente de las aportaciones de materia orgánica, como por ejemplo la hojarasca del bosque de ribera, la cual es indispensable para el funcionamiento del río. Además, no se encontraron diferencias en el metabolismo fluvial entre los dos períodos muestreados (verano y otoño).

La comparación entre los ríos estudiados indicó que no sólo las características locales del tramo estaban relacionadas con el metabolismo (por ej. la granulometría del lecho del río o la temperatura del agua), sino que los factores regionales eran esenciales para entender el funcionamiento fluvial. De estas características, destacó el papel de la climatología, que afectaba tanto a la producción como a la respiración del ecosistema. Además, los impactos humanos en la cuenca, derivados de usos agrícolas o urbanos, también tuvieron un efecto desacatado en la respiración fluvial.
Con todo ello, este estudio pone de manifiesto la importancia de incluir el paisaje y los factores climáticos a la hora de determinar y entender el funcionamiento de nuestros ríos, y muestra la experiencia positiva de una red coordinada de jóvenes investigadores para lograr retos científicos en una amplia escala geográfica.

Podéis encontrar el artículo completo aquí¡¡Esperamos que lo disfrutéis!!

lunes, 13 de julio de 2015

Vuelta a casa después de SEFS-9

Hola a tod@s,

La semana pasada estuvimos en Ginebra presentando el proyecto en SEFS-9. Una experiencia muy chula! Os dejamos más abajo el póster que presentamos.






Ahora a seguir trabajando!

Núria y Ada.




viernes, 12 de junio de 2015

Comunicando DOMIPEX

Hola a tod@s!


El proyecto DOMIPEX avanza y ya está llegando a su fin. Ahora queda analizar bien los datos y difundirlos. En abril Núria estuvo en Austria en el encuentro de FBFW 2015 para difundir el proyecto y ahora en julio estaremos en el SEFS en Ginebra.

Esperamos veros allí!


Fotos del 4º Encuento de Fresh Blood for Fresh Water (FBFW) 2015 en Mondsee (Austria)

Núria y Ada.

lunes, 19 de enero de 2015

DOMIPEX field sampling done… now analyzing!




Hi all (and happy New Year!),

In December, we finished the field work of DOMIPEX project. Now, we’ve almost compiled all field data sets from all the groups and started to run the lab analyses. We already have all the background data for the eleven streams included in this project and we started to have some of the results for additions samplings. The next steps will be to analyses all of these promising results.

Stay tuned, more news coming soon!
 




Fall sampling in Riudecanyes (Tarragona), Arroyo Blanco (Murcia), Bisueña (Cantabria), Carrera (Girona)

viernes, 26 de septiembre de 2014

DOMIPEX field sampling

Hi all,
We've finished the first sampling of DOMIPEX project, which has been doing during summer. Finally, we are fourteen groups in this project. Thanks to all for your great efforts to conduct the samplings and your involment in the project!


 
 
Now, the fall sampling is starting and will last until 30th October.
Happy sampling to all!

Núria and Ada.

jueves, 7 de agosto de 2014

DOMIPEX Team 15



Hello DOMIPEX colleagues!
We are the TEAM 15, from the Institute of Aquatic Ecology (University of Girona). We are Irene, Juanita, Anna, Núria, Elena and Mireia, a very diverse team, with researchers from different departments and lines of research. 

Irene is working in wetland systems, particularly in the study of macroinvertebrate communities and their relation to the environmental characteristics of the ecosystem surrounding them. Juanita, Anna and Núria are working in biofilms and leaf litter decomposition in Mediterranean rivers. We are focused on the ecosystem functioning regarding to the interaction with drought effect, water quality, and anthropogenic impacts.
Elena and Mireia are from molecular microbial ecology group (gEMM). Elena studies the nitrogen cycle, mainly the different fates of nitrite and nitrate in aquatic systems, as denitrification and dissimilatory nitrate reduction to ammonium. Mireia is developing her thesis around the role of the uncultured Archaea in the carbon cycle in stratified karstic lakes.
If you want to know more about our research group, check the following link:

Please find our emails here:
Mireia: mfillol@icra.cat

Have a good holidays!!!!