Lost in Dune Translation: The Effects of Aerobic Microbial Growth Dynamics on Hyporheic Transport and Reaction in the Presence of Moving Riverbed Dunes

IF 5 1区 地球科学 Q2 ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCES
W. Seth Lotts, Kyle Strom, Mark Widdowson, Eduardo Mendez, Erich T. Hester
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Abstract

The hyporheic zone is the interface between surface water (SW) and groundwater (GW) in shallow aquatic sediments where reactions can attenuate contaminants. Dunes that drive hyporheic exchange in sand-bedded rivers constantly move (translate), causing “turnover exchange,” yet few numerical studies of hyporheic processes account for this motion. Furthermore, microbial communities that mediate contaminant reactions are constantly adjusting to their environments, including to effects of migrating sediment, but prior studies have not examined the combined effects of migrating dunes and microbial growth/death. We coupled SW hydrodynamics (OpenFOAM), GW hydraulics (MODFLOW), and GW reactive transport and microbial growth/death (SEAM3D) models to simulate the effects of dune translation and dynamics of aerobic microbial colonies on subsurface transport and consumption of dissolved oxygen and dissolved organic carbon (DOC). Dune translation was implemented by modifying SEAM3D to incorporate a moving frame of reference. As dune translation speed (celerity) increased with increasing SW velocity, turnover exchange, influx of DOC from SW, aerobic microbial growth, and DOC consumption all increased, given transport-limited conditions. Our no-growth models predicted only half the DOC consumption as the growth/death models despite having over six times the biomass. Explicitly simulating microbial growth/death allows simulated microbial populations to more efficiently process DOC by adjusting their spatial distribution to substrate patterns. This effect multiplies as turnover exchange increases with dune translation, highlighting the reinforcing effects of dune movement and microbial dynamics. Our results underline the importance of including both translation and growth/death dynamics when simulating hyporheic transport and reaction induced by riverbed dunes.
迷失在沙丘平移中:移动河床沙丘存在下好氧微生物生长动力学对潜流运输和反应的影响
下潜带是浅水沉积物中地表水(SW)和地下水(GW)之间的界面,在那里反应可以减弱污染物。在砂层状河流中,沙丘驱动潜流交换不断移动(平移),导致“周转交换”,但很少有潜流过程的数值研究能解释这种运动。此外,介导污染物反应的微生物群落不断适应其环境,包括迁移沉积物的影响,但先前的研究尚未考察迁移沙丘和微生物生长/死亡的综合影响。我们将SW流体动力学(OpenFOAM)、GW水力学(MODFLOW)和GW反应输运和微生物生长/死亡(SEAM3D)模型结合起来,模拟沙丘平移和好氧微生物菌落动力学对地下输运和溶解氧和溶解有机碳(DOC)消耗的影响。沙丘的平移是通过修改SEAM3D来加入一个移动的参照系来实现的。在运输受限的条件下,沙丘移动速度(速度)随着SW速度的增加而增加,转换交换、SW的DOC流入、好氧微生物生长和DOC消耗均增加。我们的无增长模型预测的DOC消耗量只有增长/死亡模型的一半,尽管生物量是增长/死亡模型的六倍多。明确模拟微生物的生长/死亡,使模拟的微生物种群通过调整其空间分布以适应基质模式,从而更有效地处理DOC。这种效应随着沙丘平移的增加而增加,突出了沙丘运动和微生物动力学的强化作用。我们的研究结果强调了在模拟河床沙丘引起的潜流运输和反应时,包括平移和生长/死亡动力学的重要性。
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来源期刊
Water Resources Research
Water Resources Research 环境科学-湖沼学
CiteScore
8.80
自引率
13.00%
发文量
599
审稿时长
3.5 months
期刊介绍: Water Resources Research (WRR) is an interdisciplinary journal that focuses on hydrology and water resources. It publishes original research in the natural and social sciences of water. It emphasizes the role of water in the Earth system, including physical, chemical, biological, and ecological processes in water resources research and management, including social, policy, and public health implications. It encompasses observational, experimental, theoretical, analytical, numerical, and data-driven approaches that advance the science of water and its management. Submissions are evaluated for their novelty, accuracy, significance, and broader implications of the findings.
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