Significance of perylene for source allocation of terrigenous organic matter in aquatic sediments.

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Date
2019-06-19
Authors
Hanke, Ulrich
Lima-Braun, Ana L.
Eglinton, Timothy I.
Donnelly, Jeffrey P.
Galy, Valier
Poussart, Pascale F.
Hughen, Konrad A.
McNichol, Ann P.
Xu, Li
Reddy, Christopher M.
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DOI
10.1021/acs.est.9b02344
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Abstract
Perylene is a frequently abundant, and sometimes the only polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon (PAH) in aquatic sediments, but its origin has been subject of a longstanding debate in geochemical research and pollutant forensics because its historical record differs markedly from typical anthropogenic PAHs. Here we investigate whether perylene serves as a source-specific molecular marker of fungal activity in forest soils. We use a well-characterized sedimentary record (1735 to 1999) from the anoxic-bottom waters of the Pettaquamscutt River basin, RI, USA to examine mass accumulation rates and isotope records of perylene, and compare them with total organic carbon and the anthropogenic PAH fluoranthene. We support our arguments with radiocarbon (14C) data of higher plant leaf-wax n-alkanoic acids. Isotope-mass balance calculations of perylene and n-alkanoic acids indicate that ~40 % of sedimentary organic matter is of terrestrial origin. Further, both terrestrial markers are pre-aged on millennial time-scales prior to burial in sediments and insensitive to elevated 14C concentrations following nuclear weapons testing in the mid-20th Century. Instead, changes coincide with enhanced erosional flux during urban sprawl. These findings suggest that perylene is definitely a product of soil derived fungi, and a powerful chemical tracer to study spatial and temporal connectivity between terrestrial and aquatic environments.
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Author Posting. © American Chemical Society, 2019. This is an open access article published under an ACS AuthorChoice License. The definitive version was published in Environmental Science and Technology 53(14), (2019):8244-8251, doi:10.1021/acs.est.9b02344.
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Hanke U.M., Lima-Braun A.L., Eglinton T.I., Donnelly J.P., Galy V., Poussart P., Hughen K., McNichol A.P., Xu L., & Reddy C.M. (2019). Significance of perylene for source allocation of terrigenous organic matter in aquatic sediments. Environmental Science & Technology, 53(14), 8244-8251.
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