Parra-Suarez S, Wild R, Gilfedder BS, Geist J, Barth J, Frei S, Peiffer S (2025)
Publication Type: Journal article
Publication year: 2025
Book Volume: 279
Article Number: 123368
DOI: 10.1016/j.watres.2025.123368
The interface between groundwater and surface water is a critical zone influencing ecohydrological and biogeochemical cycles within surface water ecosystems. It is characterized by complex redox gradients, with groundwater-mediated inflow of reduced substances affecting the oxygen budget of stream water. In this study, we have experimentally simulated the inflow of Fe(II)-rich groundwater into the open stream water of a flume system to quantify its effect on dissolved oxygen concentration in both the stream water and the hyporheic zone. The experimental setup consisted of 12 flumes, half used for input of groundwater augmented with Fe(II), while the other half served as a control. We studied the effects of coarse (6% fine sediment content) sediment vs. fine (28 % fine sediment content) sediment as well as and moderate (3 L s-1) vs. low (0.5 L s-1) flow rate in a fully-crossed, 3-way-replicated design. Weekly sampling campaigns were performed to analyze Fe(II), Fe(III), DOC, and dissolved oxygen (DO) concentrations in the pore water (hyporheic zone) and in the open water over five consecutive weeks. Our results indicate that Fe(II) inflow substantially decreased DO concentrations in both the pore and open waters. Oxygen uptake rates increased from 7.4 up to 8.6 g O
APA:
Parra-Suarez, S., Wild, R., Gilfedder, B.S., Geist, J., Barth, J., Frei, S., & Peiffer, S. (2025). Subsurface Fe (II) affects concentrations of dissolved O2 in streamwater. Water Research, 279. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.watres.2025.123368
MLA:
Parra-Suarez, Silvia, et al. "Subsurface Fe (II) affects concentrations of dissolved O2 in streamwater." Water Research 279 (2025).
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