Czech Ministry of Education (LD14045)

Link to this page

Czech Ministry of Education (LD14045)

Authors

Publications

An affordable and reliable assessment of aquatic decomposition: Tailoring the Tea Bag Index to surface waters.

Seelen, Laura M S; Flaim, Giovanna; Keuskamp, Joost; Teurlincx, Sven; Arias Font, Raquel; Tolunay, Duygu; Fránková, Markéta; Šumberová, Kateřina; Temponeras, Maria; Lenhardt, Mirjana; Jennings, Eleanor; de Senerpont Domis, Lisette N.

(2018)

TY  - JOUR
AU  - Seelen, Laura M S
AU  - Flaim, Giovanna
AU  - Keuskamp, Joost
AU  - Teurlincx, Sven
AU  - Arias Font, Raquel
AU  - Tolunay, Duygu
AU  - Fránková, Markéta
AU  - Šumberová, Kateřina
AU  - Temponeras, Maria
AU  - Lenhardt, Mirjana
AU  - Jennings, Eleanor
AU  - de Senerpont Domis, Lisette N.
PY  - 2018
UR  - https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0043135418310121?via%3Dihub
UR  - https://radar.ibiss.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/3227
AB  - Litter decomposition is a vital part of the global carbon cycle as it determines not only the amount of carbon to be sequestered, but also how fast carbon re-enters the cycle. Freshwater systems play an active role in the carbon cycle as it receives, and decomposes, terrestrial litter material alongside decomposing aquatic plant litter. Decomposition of organic matter in the aquatic environment is directly controlled by water temperature and nutrient availability, which are continuously affected by global change. We adapted the Tea Bag Index (TBI), a highly standardized methodology for determining soil decomposition, for lakes by incorporating a leaching factor. By placing Lipton pyramid tea bags in the aquatic environment for 3 h, we quantified the period of intense leaching which usually takes place prior to litter (tea) decomposition. Standard TBI methodology was followed after this step to determine how fast decomposition takes place (decomposition rate, k1) and how much of the material cannot be broken down and is thus sequestered (stabilization factor, S). A Citizen Science project was organized to test the aquatic TBI in 40 European lakes located in four climate zones, ranging from oligotrophic to hypereutrophic systems. We expected that warmer and/or eutrophic lakes would have a higher decomposition rate and a more efficient microbial community resulting in less tea material to be sequestered. The overall high decomposition rates (k1) found confirm the active role lakes play in the global carbon cycle. Across climate regions the lakes in the warmer temperate zone displayed a higher decomposition rate (k1) compared to the colder lakes in the continental and polar zones. Across trophic states, decomposition rates were higher in eutrophic lakes compared to oligotrophic lakes. Additionally, the eutrophic lakes showed a higher stabilization (S), thus a less efficient microbial community, compared to the oligotrophic lakes, although the variation within this group was high. Our results clearly show that the TBI can be used to adequately assess the decomposition process in aquatic systems. Using "alien standard litter" such as tea provides a powerful way to compare decomposition across climates, trophic states and ecosystems. By providing standardized protocols, a website, as well as face to face meetings, we also showed that collecting scientifically relevant data can go hand in hand with increasing scientific and environmental literacy in participants. Gathering process-based information about lake ecosystems gives managers the best tools to anticipate and react to future global change. Furthermore, combining this process-based information with citizen science, thus outreach, is in complete agreement with the Water Framework Directive goals as set in 2010.
T2  - Water Research
T1  - An affordable and reliable assessment of aquatic decomposition: Tailoring the Tea Bag Index to surface waters.
VL  - 151
DO  - 10.1016/j.watres.2018.11.081
SP  - 31
EP  - 43
ER  - 
@article{
author = "Seelen, Laura M S and Flaim, Giovanna and Keuskamp, Joost and Teurlincx, Sven and Arias Font, Raquel and Tolunay, Duygu and Fránková, Markéta and Šumberová, Kateřina and Temponeras, Maria and Lenhardt, Mirjana and Jennings, Eleanor and de Senerpont Domis, Lisette N.",
year = "2018",
abstract = "Litter decomposition is a vital part of the global carbon cycle as it determines not only the amount of carbon to be sequestered, but also how fast carbon re-enters the cycle. Freshwater systems play an active role in the carbon cycle as it receives, and decomposes, terrestrial litter material alongside decomposing aquatic plant litter. Decomposition of organic matter in the aquatic environment is directly controlled by water temperature and nutrient availability, which are continuously affected by global change. We adapted the Tea Bag Index (TBI), a highly standardized methodology for determining soil decomposition, for lakes by incorporating a leaching factor. By placing Lipton pyramid tea bags in the aquatic environment for 3 h, we quantified the period of intense leaching which usually takes place prior to litter (tea) decomposition. Standard TBI methodology was followed after this step to determine how fast decomposition takes place (decomposition rate, k1) and how much of the material cannot be broken down and is thus sequestered (stabilization factor, S). A Citizen Science project was organized to test the aquatic TBI in 40 European lakes located in four climate zones, ranging from oligotrophic to hypereutrophic systems. We expected that warmer and/or eutrophic lakes would have a higher decomposition rate and a more efficient microbial community resulting in less tea material to be sequestered. The overall high decomposition rates (k1) found confirm the active role lakes play in the global carbon cycle. Across climate regions the lakes in the warmer temperate zone displayed a higher decomposition rate (k1) compared to the colder lakes in the continental and polar zones. Across trophic states, decomposition rates were higher in eutrophic lakes compared to oligotrophic lakes. Additionally, the eutrophic lakes showed a higher stabilization (S), thus a less efficient microbial community, compared to the oligotrophic lakes, although the variation within this group was high. Our results clearly show that the TBI can be used to adequately assess the decomposition process in aquatic systems. Using "alien standard litter" such as tea provides a powerful way to compare decomposition across climates, trophic states and ecosystems. By providing standardized protocols, a website, as well as face to face meetings, we also showed that collecting scientifically relevant data can go hand in hand with increasing scientific and environmental literacy in participants. Gathering process-based information about lake ecosystems gives managers the best tools to anticipate and react to future global change. Furthermore, combining this process-based information with citizen science, thus outreach, is in complete agreement with the Water Framework Directive goals as set in 2010.",
journal = "Water Research",
title = "An affordable and reliable assessment of aquatic decomposition: Tailoring the Tea Bag Index to surface waters.",
volume = "151",
doi = "10.1016/j.watres.2018.11.081",
pages = "31-43"
}
Seelen, L. M. S., Flaim, G., Keuskamp, J., Teurlincx, S., Arias Font, R., Tolunay, D., Fránková, M., Šumberová, K., Temponeras, M., Lenhardt, M., Jennings, E.,& de Senerpont Domis, L. N.. (2018). An affordable and reliable assessment of aquatic decomposition: Tailoring the Tea Bag Index to surface waters.. in Water Research, 151, 31-43.
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.watres.2018.11.081
Seelen LMS, Flaim G, Keuskamp J, Teurlincx S, Arias Font R, Tolunay D, Fránková M, Šumberová K, Temponeras M, Lenhardt M, Jennings E, de Senerpont Domis LN. An affordable and reliable assessment of aquatic decomposition: Tailoring the Tea Bag Index to surface waters.. in Water Research. 2018;151:31-43.
doi:10.1016/j.watres.2018.11.081 .
Seelen, Laura M S, Flaim, Giovanna, Keuskamp, Joost, Teurlincx, Sven, Arias Font, Raquel, Tolunay, Duygu, Fránková, Markéta, Šumberová, Kateřina, Temponeras, Maria, Lenhardt, Mirjana, Jennings, Eleanor, de Senerpont Domis, Lisette N., "An affordable and reliable assessment of aquatic decomposition: Tailoring the Tea Bag Index to surface waters." in Water Research, 151 (2018):31-43,
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.watres.2018.11.081 . .
15
37
17
33