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Wiley InterScience | ||||
![]() Freshwater BiologyVolume 34 Issue 2, Pages 329 - 342 Published Online: 30 May 2006 © 2010 Blackwell Publishing Ltd
Abstract | References | Full Text: PDF (Size: 1696K) | Related Articles | Citation Tracking Microbial enzyme activities as indicators of organic matter processing rates in a Lake Erie coastal wetland Copyright 1995 Blackwell Science Ltd ABSTRACT
1. Particulate organic material (POM) is an important source of energy and nutrients in aquatic ecosystems. The decomposition of this material is typically studied using the litter bag technique. However, this method has inherent limitations that can preclude the estimation of in situ decomposition rates, especially for fine particles. In this study, we tried to circumvent these limitations through the use of enzymatic decomposition models (EDMs), which relate mass loss rates to lignocellulase activities. With this approach, we investigated the in situ processing of three size ranges of detritus in a Typha wetland. 2. Litter was collected, dried and sorted into three size ranges [coarse (C) > 4, medium (M) 0.5–4 and fine (F) 0.063–0.5 mm] and placed in litter bags that were attached to the sediment surface at two sites in a Typha wetland in May 1994. Over a 7-month period, litter bags were collected and analysed for mass loss and the activities of six extracellular enzymes involved in the degradation of lignocellulose. In situ POM was collected concurrently, sorted into the same three size ranges and assayed for the same suite of enzymes. Additional cores were taken for the determination of organic matter standing stocks and particle size distribution. 3. Mean mass loss rates for CPOM, MPOM and FPOM were -0.139, -0.073 and -0.053% day 4. Despite some problems, the EDM method has the potential to facilitate studies of detrital dynamics in large, heterogeneous systems. (Manuscript accepted 24 May 1995) |