457-4 Characterizing Lignin Chemistry of Wetland Soil Profiles in the Atchafalaya and Barataria Basins.
Poster Number 2029
See more from this Division: SSSA Division: Wetland SoilsSee more from this Session: Wetland Soils: II (includes student competition)
deterioration of the Mississippi River deltaic plain wetlands could be
the additional source leading to the hypoxia in the northern Gulf of
Mexico along the Louisiana coast. In this study, wetland soil profiles
from two contrasting basins, Atchafalaya Basin and Barataria, were
characterized for degradation characteristics of lignin biomarkers
using a tetramethylammonium hydroxide (TMAH)-Pyrolysis gas
chromatography/mass spectrometry (PY-GC/MS) method. Various
ratios of lignin monomers were evaluated. The results showed that
ratios of guaiacols with intact C3 side chains to guaiacol (C3G/G)
soil profiles in Barataria Basin was much higher than those in the
Atchafalaya Basin soil profiles, suggesting generally less degradation of
organic matter in Barataria Basin. In addition, there was a general trend
of decreasing C3G/G ratio with soil depth in the freshwater marsh soil
profiles in the Barataria Basin, indicating more extensive degradation
of organic matter in the deeper layers. The range of change in ratios
of C3G/G and C3S/S among the three sites from inland toward ocean
in Atchafalaya Basin was relatively small, suggesting non-preferred
degradation between Syringyl and Guaiacol lignin monomers. These
results have important implications in interpreting soil/sediment
organic matter transformation in these different coastal basins.
See more from this Session: Wetland Soils: II (includes student competition)