Biogeophysical properties of an expansive Antarctic supraglacial stream
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2017
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Abstract
Supraglacial streams are important hydrologic features in glaciated environments as they are
conduits for the transport of aeolian debris, meltwater, solutes and microbial communities.
We characterized the basic geomorphology, hydrology and biogeochemistry of the Cotton Glacier
supraglacial stream located in the McMurdo Dry Valleys of Antarctica. The distinctive geomorphology
of the stream is driven by accumulated aeolian sediment from the Transantarctic Mountains, while solar
radiation and summer temperatures govern melt in the system. The hydrologic functioning of the Cotton
Glacier stream is largely controlled by the formation of ice dams that lead to vastly different annual flow
regimes and extreme flushing events. Stream water is chemically dilute and lacks a detectable humic
signature. However, the fluorescent signature of dissolved organic matter (DOM) in the stream does
demonstrate an extremely transitory red-shifted signal found only in near-stream sediment leachates and
during the initial flushing of the system at the onset of flow. This suggests that episodic physical flushing
drives pulses of DOM with variable quality in this stream. This is the first description of a large Antarctic
supraglacial stream and our results provide evidence that the hydrology and geomorphology of
supraglacial streams drive resident microbial community composition and biogeochemical cycling
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Citation
SanClements, Michael D., Heidi J. Smith, Christine M. Foreman, Marco Tedesco, Yu-Ping Chin, Christopher Jaros, and Diane M. McKnight. “Biogeophysical Properties of an Expansive Antarctic Supraglacial Stream.” Antarctic Science 29, no. 01 (October 20, 2016): 33–44. doi:10.1017/s0954102016000456.