Leaf litter degradation in highly turbid transitional waters: Preliminary results from litter-bag experiments in the Gironde Estuary

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Abstract

The rates of decomposition of oak (Quercus robur) leaves have been examined using litter bags in a very high turbidity macrotidal estuary, the Gironde Estuary (S.W. France). The first experiments show a marked decrease in the decomposition rate of oak leaves at the water-sediment interface (mud-contact: anoxic conditions, reduced physical fragmentation) in comparison to the water column. The results point out the impact of hydrodynamic conditions on leaf litter degradation in such fluvio-estuarine systems. Regarding the aquatic-terrestrial linkage, our observations suggest direct changes in leaf decomposition kinetics and then, a potential delay on the recycling and transport processes of coarse particulate organic matter, especially in a context of modification of the natural water flow, due to global and land use changes.

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Fuentes-Cid, A., Chauvet, E., Etcheber, H., De-Oliveira, E., Sottolichio, A., & Schmidt, S. (2015). Leaf litter degradation in highly turbid transitional waters: Preliminary results from litter-bag experiments in the Gironde Estuary. Geodinamica Acta, 27(1), 60–66. https://doi.org/10.1080/09853111.2013.877233

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