posted on 2006-09-15, 00:00authored byLubos Polerecky, Nils Volkenborn, Peter Stief
A technique is presented for temporal characterization of
the bioirrigation activity of benthic macrofauna and for
quantitative estimation of its effects on the oxygen exchange
between the sediment and the overlying water. The
technique is based on high temporal resolution (15−30 s)
oxygen imaging aided by a planar oxygen optode and
can be applied under laboratory and field conditions, both
freshwater and marine. It allows direct observation of
the complex 2D oxygen dynamics in the sediment around
the burrow while the animal dwells undisturbed in its
natural environment. The conditions to which the animal
is exposed can easily be controlled or manipulated.
Chironomus plumosus, widely distributed freshwater insect
larvae, were used in a case study. Their bioirrigation
activity was divided into a random succession of pumping
intervals (duration 5.4 ± 1.7 min) and rest periods (duration
9.2 ± 5.8 min). The burrow ventilation resulted in a highly
variable volume of the oxygenated sediment surrounding
the burrow and the associated sedimentary oxygen uptake
rate through the burrow wall (OUB), both changing
dramatically within minutes. Their variability was higher in
a burrow under construction than around a stationary
burrow. The average OUB rate (∼0.15 μmol O2 h-1), when
translated into a time-averaged O2 flux across the
burrow wall, constituted approximately 64% of the stationary
diffusive oxygen flux measured at the sediment−water
interface (∼0.9 mmol O2 m-2 h-1).