Dissolved oxygen dynamics reveal biogeochemical tipping points driven by river corridor hydrology

2020 
Riverbeds can have an important impact on large-scale fluxes of biogeochemically active solutes in river corridor systems. The hyporheic zone is an important area of both hydrology and biogeochemistry, particularly in a hydropeaked river system where rapid variations in river stage height, hydraulic gradients, and residence times occur. We measured several biogeochemical and hydrological parameters at three different subsurface depths in the riverbed of the Columbia River in Washington state, a complex hydropeaked river system with significant subsurface heterogeneity. During the study, episodes of significant dissolved oxygen (DO) change were observed. The DO signal changes were the most apparent, compared to more modest changes in other biogeochemical markers. While DO is often associated with biological activity, we ultimately found that the notable DO excursions were associated with hydrologic gradients. Here we describe hydrologic perturbations and biogeochemical responses in terms of hydrobiogeochemical regimes. Two different forms of DO response to hydraulic gradient perturbation were observed, defining different hydrobiogeochemical regimes. The system tips abruptly from one regime to the other, exhibiting threshold behavior that is uncaptured in current estimations of cumulative influences of subsurface processes from reach to earth system scales.
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