Publication | Open Access
Dynamics of nonphotochemical superoxide production in the Great Barrier Reef lagoon
53
Citations
47
References
2010
Year
EngineeringCoral EcosystemsOcean PollutionMarine ChemistryOceanographyGreat Barrier ReefEnvironmental PhotochemistryMarine EnvironmentEnvironmental ChemistryMarine PollutionBioremediationBiological OceanographySuperoxide DismutaseNonphotochemical Superoxide ProductionPhotosynthesisO 2Health SciencesBiogeochemistryPhotochemistryWater BiologyWater QualityMarine Biology
Superoxide (O 2 – ) and hydrogen peroxide (H 2 O 2 ) concentrations ranging from 87 to 1120 pmol L −1 and 5 to 107 nmol L −1 , respectively, were measured in samples of surface water from the Great Barrier Reef (GBR) lagoon in the absence of photochemistry. Nonphotochemical, particle‐associated net production rates of O 2 ‐ ranging from 1 to 16 pmol L ‐1 s ‐1 were also determined and calculated to be similar in magnitude to the likely abiotic photochemical O 2 ‐ production rates in GBR surface waters. Manipulative experiments using 0.22‐µm filtration and addition of biological inhibitors demonstrated that the majority of this particle‐associated production was biological and likely driven by photosynthetic organisms. Pseudo‐first‐order O 2 ‐ decay rate constants were very low at O 2 ‐ concentrations < 1 nmol L ‐1 (values in filtered samples ranged from 0.7 to 4.3 x 10 −2 s −1 ) but increased with increasing O 2 ‐ concentration toward a value of ~ 0.2 s −1 at O 2 ‐ concentrations > 10 nmol L ‐1 . This was thought to occur because reduced forms of metals such as iron and copper, or redox‐active organic moieties, preferentially react with O 2 rather than O 2 ‐ at low O 2 ‐ concentrations, thereby inhibiting catalyzed O 2 ‐ disproportionation. This notion was supported by the observation that addition of superoxide dismutase dramatically increased rates of H 2 O 2 production in samples. We suggest that, under these conditions, O 2 ‐ can maintain a biologically useful reducing microenvironment around cells without resulting in significant accumulation of potentially harmful H 2 O 2 .
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1