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TitleCarbon sources, microbial community production, and respiration in constructed wetlands of the Alberta, Canada oil sands mining area
Publication TypeThesis
Year of Publication2007
AuthorsDaly, C. A.
VolumeBiological Sciences
IssueM. Sc.
Pagination227
Place PublishedUniversity of Windsor
Publication Languageen
Keywordsnutrient cycles
Abstract

Carbon sources, microbial community production and respiration were determined in 9 wetlands in northeastern Alberta subject to oil sands mining. A stable isotope mixing model estimated the proportion of carbon sources (primary production, sediment and petroleum) assimilated by microbes. The proportions of petroleum-derived carbon from oil sands process material (OSPM)-affected wetlands ranged from 62-97%. Bacterioplankton production was quantified by monitoring 3 H-leucine incorporation into bacterial proteins. Production and methanogenesis were inhibited by sulphate and/or salinity. Amending wetland sediments with topsoil, a reclamation strategy, did not affect bacterial production, or stimulate decomposition. Unvegetated wetland sediments were small net exporters of C (0.61 mg/m 2 /d) and do not appear to be on a trajectory to becoming net sinks in these early stages of development. Overall, microbial functional processes in OSPM-affected wetlands are markedly different from processes in reference constructed wetlands of equivalent age and do not correspond to those in a natural wetland.

Notes

CFRAW Carbon Dynamics, Food Web structure, and Reclamation Strategies in Athabasca oil sands Wetlands

URLhttp://search.proquest.com/docview/304849939
Topics

Biology, Environmental Science, Oil & Other Non-renewable Fuels

Locational Keywords

northeastern Alberta

Active Link

http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/577949982

Group

Science

Citation Key47707

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