Publication | Closed Access
Tide-Triggered Production of Reactive Oxygen Species in Coastal Soils
121
Citations
51
References
2022
Year
We report an unrecognized, tidal source of reactive oxygen species (ROS). Using a newly developed ROS-trapping gel film, we observed hot spots for ROS generation within ∼2.5 mm of coastal surface soil. Kinetic analyses showed rapid production of hydroxyl radicals (<sup>•</sup>OH), superoxide (O<sub>2</sub><sup>•-</sup>), and hydrogen peroxide (H<sub>2</sub>O<sub>2</sub>) upon a shift from high tide to low tide. The ROS production exhibited a distinct rhythmic fluctuation. The oscillations of the redox potential and dissolved oxygen concentration followed the same pattern as the <sup>•</sup>OH production, suggesting the alternating oxic-anoxic conditions as the main geochemical drive for ROS production. Nationwide coastal field investigations confirmed the widespread and sustainable production of ROS via tidal processes (22.1-117.4 μmol/m<sup>2</sup>/day), which was 5- to 36-fold more efficient than those via classical photochemical routes (1.5-7.6 μmol/m<sup>2</sup>/day). Analyses of soil physicochemical properties demonstrated that soil redox-metastable components such as redox-active iron minerals and organic matter played a key role in storing electrons at high tide and shuttling electrons to infiltrated oxygen at low tide for ROS production. Our work sheds light on a ubiquitous but previously overlooked tidal source of ROS, which may accelerate carbon and metal cycles as well as pollutant degradation in coastal soils.
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