Environmental and biochemical controls on the molecular distribution and stable isotope composition of leaf wax biomarkers
Leaf wax n-alkyl lipids are increasingly used as proxies in palaeoclimate studies. Palaeovegetation assemblages are reconstructed from their molecular distribution patterns, while their δ13C and δ2H signals are thought to reflect plant-environment interactions and palaeohydrological shifts, respecti...
Main Author: | |
---|---|
Published: |
University of East Anglia
2014
|
Subjects: | |
Online Access: | http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.633801 |
id |
ndltd-bl.uk-oai-ethos.bl.uk-633801 |
---|---|
record_format |
oai_dc |
spelling |
ndltd-bl.uk-oai-ethos.bl.uk-6338012016-08-04T03:58:09ZEnvironmental and biochemical controls on the molecular distribution and stable isotope composition of leaf wax biomarkersEley, Yvette2014Leaf wax n-alkyl lipids are increasingly used as proxies in palaeoclimate studies. Palaeovegetation assemblages are reconstructed from their molecular distribution patterns, while their δ13C and δ2H signals are thought to reflect plant-environment interactions and palaeohydrological shifts, respectively. Such applications depend, however, upon these compounds faithfully recording environmental conditions. To explore the influence of environmental, physical and biochemical controls on n-alkane composition, leaf waxes from seven UK saltmarsh plants were analysed over two growing seasons. Linked analysis of sedimentary n-alkanes enabled further investigation of leaf wax biomarker integration into saltmarsh sediments. The molecular distribution and concentration of n-alkanes from the saltmarsh plants varied significantly. Bulk and n-alkane δ13C recorded different seasonal shifts, with a range of up to 13‰ in the offset between bulk and n-alkane 13C/12C values. This indicated that post-photosynthetic 13C/12C fractionation may be an important additional control on n-alkane δ13C signals. n-Alkane δ2H also varied among the sampled species by >100‰, and could not be explained by physical processes controlling the movement of water inside/outside and within leaves. Comparison with the 2H/1H of chloroplast-synthesised compounds (fatty acids, phytol) suggested these differences instead reflected the varied biochemical mechanisms operating in the chloroplast and cytosol. Sedimentary biomarker analysis further highlighted that small/moderate vegetation change could drive shifts of ~40‰ in sedimentary nalkane 2H/1H, while using globally averaged “typical” values to correct for fractionation between source water and n-alkane 2H/1H may not be representative of a specific geographical location. Results demonstrate: (i) the importance of biochemical mechanisms in controlling the molecular and isotopic composition of n-alkyl lipids; and (ii) the need to further constrain the influence of vegetation change on the isotope composition of sedimentary n-alkanes. Future research should address these areas in other biomes and depositional environments, to ensure accurate interpretation of modern and ancient leaf wax lipid data.577University of East Angliahttp://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.633801https://ueaeprints.uea.ac.uk/52165/Electronic Thesis or Dissertation |
collection |
NDLTD |
sources |
NDLTD |
topic |
577 |
spellingShingle |
577 Eley, Yvette Environmental and biochemical controls on the molecular distribution and stable isotope composition of leaf wax biomarkers |
description |
Leaf wax n-alkyl lipids are increasingly used as proxies in palaeoclimate studies. Palaeovegetation assemblages are reconstructed from their molecular distribution patterns, while their δ13C and δ2H signals are thought to reflect plant-environment interactions and palaeohydrological shifts, respectively. Such applications depend, however, upon these compounds faithfully recording environmental conditions. To explore the influence of environmental, physical and biochemical controls on n-alkane composition, leaf waxes from seven UK saltmarsh plants were analysed over two growing seasons. Linked analysis of sedimentary n-alkanes enabled further investigation of leaf wax biomarker integration into saltmarsh sediments. The molecular distribution and concentration of n-alkanes from the saltmarsh plants varied significantly. Bulk and n-alkane δ13C recorded different seasonal shifts, with a range of up to 13‰ in the offset between bulk and n-alkane 13C/12C values. This indicated that post-photosynthetic 13C/12C fractionation may be an important additional control on n-alkane δ13C signals. n-Alkane δ2H also varied among the sampled species by >100‰, and could not be explained by physical processes controlling the movement of water inside/outside and within leaves. Comparison with the 2H/1H of chloroplast-synthesised compounds (fatty acids, phytol) suggested these differences instead reflected the varied biochemical mechanisms operating in the chloroplast and cytosol. Sedimentary biomarker analysis further highlighted that small/moderate vegetation change could drive shifts of ~40‰ in sedimentary nalkane 2H/1H, while using globally averaged “typical” values to correct for fractionation between source water and n-alkane 2H/1H may not be representative of a specific geographical location. Results demonstrate: (i) the importance of biochemical mechanisms in controlling the molecular and isotopic composition of n-alkyl lipids; and (ii) the need to further constrain the influence of vegetation change on the isotope composition of sedimentary n-alkanes. Future research should address these areas in other biomes and depositional environments, to ensure accurate interpretation of modern and ancient leaf wax lipid data. |
author |
Eley, Yvette |
author_facet |
Eley, Yvette |
author_sort |
Eley, Yvette |
title |
Environmental and biochemical controls on the molecular distribution and stable isotope composition of leaf wax biomarkers |
title_short |
Environmental and biochemical controls on the molecular distribution and stable isotope composition of leaf wax biomarkers |
title_full |
Environmental and biochemical controls on the molecular distribution and stable isotope composition of leaf wax biomarkers |
title_fullStr |
Environmental and biochemical controls on the molecular distribution and stable isotope composition of leaf wax biomarkers |
title_full_unstemmed |
Environmental and biochemical controls on the molecular distribution and stable isotope composition of leaf wax biomarkers |
title_sort |
environmental and biochemical controls on the molecular distribution and stable isotope composition of leaf wax biomarkers |
publisher |
University of East Anglia |
publishDate |
2014 |
url |
http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.633801 |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT eleyyvette environmentalandbiochemicalcontrolsonthemoleculardistributionandstableisotopecompositionofleafwaxbiomarkers |
_version_ |
1718372336470589440 |