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Stable carbon isotopes in the shell of Corbicula fluminea (Muller 1774): Implications for understanding environmental changes in drainage basins TEXT SIZE: A A A

Dissolved inorganic carbon (DIC) is a primary constituent of the aquatic geochemistry of terrestrial ecosystems.  Changes in DIC concentration and its isotopic composition are closely associated with environmental changes in the drainage basin.  Thus, a better understanding of DIC may lead to improved characterization of environmental changes. 

Corbicula fluminea (Muller 1774), a bivalve native to southeast Asia and a dominant invasive species in many aquatic environments around the world, has the potential to record DIC information, particularly because of its sequential skeletal deposition.  Analysis of the stable carbon isotope composition (delta C-13) of the shell and the aquatic DIC in the Xijiang River drainage basins in southern and western China allowed us to determine that changes in delta C-13 in the skeleton significantly correlated with those of DIC (P < 0.01, r = 0.63). 

These results indicate that the isotopic signature of the shell reflects that delta C-13 of the DIC in ambient water.  The temporal resolution was at the seasonal scale.  Metabolic effect does not change the co-variation, even though it makes the shell delta C-13 1.4 parts per thousand lower statistically than that of DIC. delta C-13 of DIC in creeks of some watershed areas may experience large temporal changes characterization of these changes requires high sampling resolution of the shell.  This problem makes the clams in these areas less preferable for reconstruction of environmental changes.  The present findings provide the basis for recovering paleoenvironmental changes and carbon cycles in a watershed through analysis of fossil shells of C. fluminea, which are common in some lacustrine and/or riverine sediment sequences.

 Publication name

CHINESE SCIENCE BULLETIN  Volume: 55  Issue: 36  Pages: 4162-4167  Published: DEC 2010

 Author(s)

Zhou Hui, Liu CongQiang, Jiang Qian, Jiang Wei, Zhao YanLong, Ding WenCi, Yan Hui

 Corresponding author  

ZHOU Hui
zhouhui@mails.gyig.ac.cn  
1. Chinese Acad Sci, State Key Lab Environm Geochem, Inst Geochem, Guiyang 550002, Peoples R China
2. Chinese Acad Sci, Grad Univ, Beijing 100049, Peoples R China

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