作者
Audrey Laberge-Carignan,Martin Pilote,Dominic Larivière,Florence Mercier,Diogo Folhas,Raoul‐Marie Couture
摘要
Thermokarst ponds (thaw lakes) are ubiquitous in northern landscapes. They are hotspots for the biogeochemical processing of elements, such as carbon (C), nitrogen (N), sulfur (S), iron (Fe) and manganese (Mn). In turn, those elementary cycles may control the mobility of selenium (Se), an essential micronutrient. To unravel these coupled biogeochemical cycles and identify processes controlling Se mobility, we studied four thermokarst ponds in a subarctic peatland valley influenced by permafrost thaw. The data set comprises of water column and sediment porewater concentration profiles collected during both summer and winter. Physicochemical parameters and dissolved concentrations of major elements, nutrients, and Se were measured and used to model fluxes at the sediment–water interface and to calculate Se speciation. The results suggest that the proximity of the pond from the permafrost structures influenced their biogeochemical dynamics. In the ponds close to permafrost, Se concentrations are 2-fold higher in winter compared to summer, accompanied by an increase in sediment fluxes from 13 to 149 pmol cm–2 yr–1 between summer and winter. The combination of comparatively older dissolved organic matter and of oxygenated conditions explain the seasonal variation in Se concentrations. In the ponds further from the permafrost, Se concentrations are higher, remain unchanged in the water column across seasons, and are linearly correlated with both DOC (R2 = 0.64, p < 0.01, n = 50) and Fe (R2 = 0.60) concentrations. Thermodynamic calculations show that Se(IV) dominates Se speciation in the porewater at all sites, while the water column reaches saturation with respect to elemental zerovalent Se, suggesting that precipitation of elemental Se could mediate dissolved Se concentrations. Collectively, our results point to the strong control that redox conditions exert on Se mobility, via DOC and Fe, and to the linkages between landscape features, pond physicochemistry, and Se dynamics.