Investigating the carbon isotope composition and leaf wax n-alkane concentration of C3 and C4 plants in Stiffkey saltmarsh, Norfolk, UK

•Seasonal variation in C3n-alkane δ13C (<10‰) exceeded that in bulk tissue (<7‰).•Seasonal trends in bulk and n-alkane δ13C diverge for C3 dicots and succulents.•Fractionation between plant bulk and n-alkane δ13C reached 13‰.•Plants varied by >2 orders of magnitude in the amount of n-alkane...

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Published inOrganic geochemistry Vol. 96; pp. 28 - 42
Main Authors Eley, Yvette, Dawson, Lorna, Pedentchouk, Nikolai
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Elsevier Ltd 01.06.2016
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Summary:•Seasonal variation in C3n-alkane δ13C (<10‰) exceeded that in bulk tissue (<7‰).•Seasonal trends in bulk and n-alkane δ13C diverge for C3 dicots and succulents.•Fractionation between plant bulk and n-alkane δ13C reached 13‰.•Plants varied by >2 orders of magnitude in the amount of n-alkanes they produced.•C3/C4 reconstruction in temperate salt marshes has a potential uncertainty of ∼11%. The carbon isotope composition of terrestrial plants records valuable ecophysiological and palaeoecological information. However, interspecies variability in 13C/12C, at both the bulk and compound-specific (CS) level, requires further exploration across a range of ecosystem types. Here, we present bulk and n-alkane δ13C values, and n-alkane concentrations, from seven plants (C3 and C4) growing in a temperate UK saltmarsh. Inter- and intra-species variation in n-alkane δ13C values among C3 plants ranged from 8‰ (n-C31) to 10‰ (n-C27) across the 2011 and 2012 growing seasons, exceeding variability in bulk tissue (7‰). In contrast, the C4 monocot showed <2‰ seasonal shifts in bulk and CS values. As a result of the variability in our CS data, we calculate that n-alkane based C3/C4 reconstructions in temperate saltmarshes have a maximum uncertainty of ∼11%. For dicots and succulents, seasonal bulk and CS δ13C trends diverged, while for C3 and C4 monocots, bulk and CS values followed similar temporal patterns. Fractionation between bulk and n-alkane carbon isotope values varied from −4 to −10‰ for C3 plants, and reached −13‰ for the C4 monocot. We explain discrepancies between bulk and n-alkane δ13C values by referring to possible interspecies variation in salinity adaptation, which may influence the partitioning of pyruvate, shifting the isotopic composition of lipid biomarkers. These findings open new avenues for empirical studies to further understand the metabolic processes fractionating carbon during the synthesis of n-alkanes, enhancing interpretation of the biomarker signal from the geological record.
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ISSN:0146-6380
1873-5290
DOI:10.1016/j.orggeochem.2016.03.005