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MEPS 175:251-259 (1998)
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Abstract
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Accumulation and transport of seagrass-derived organic matter in reef flat sediment of Green Island, Great Barrier Reef
Toshihiro Miyajima1,*, Isao Koike1, Hiroya Yamano2, Hitoshi Iizumi3
1Marine Biochemistry Laboratory, Ocean Research Institute, The University of Tokyo, Nakano, Tokyo 164, Japan
2Department of Geography, Faculty of Science, The University of Tokyo, Hongo, Tokyo 113, Japan
3Hokkaido National Fishery Research Institute, Kushiro, Hokkaido 085, Japan
*E-mail: miyajima@ori.u-tokyo.ac.jp

ABSTRACT: Coral-reef sediment vegetated by seagrasses is usually enriched in organic matter as compared with unvegetated reef sediment. This study focused on comparisons of sediment composition and mobility between vegetated and unvegetated sediments of
Green Island reef (the Great Barrier Reef, Australia). Seagrass-derived macroscopic debris and amorphous detrital organic matter were especially responsible for the organic enrichment in the seagrass-bed sediment, while carbonate-associated, acid-soluble
organic matter was only slightly enriched in seagrass beds. A sediment-trap experiment revealed that particles trapped in the seagrass beds were richer in organic carbon than those collected in the unvegetated area, although the organic carbon flux
depended on wind condition rather than vegetation. The trapped organic particles had C:N:P ratios similar to the amorphous organic fraction of sediment organic matter, being significantly enriched in N and P as compared with seagrass-derived, macroscopic
organic fragments. Conservation of N and P during bacterial decomposition of plant-derived organic matter is probably responsible for the enrichment of N and P. The characteristic time scale of the amorphous organic matter turnover by resuspension and
deposition was estimated to be tens of days or less, being comparable to or faster than mineralization. These comparisons suggest that seagrass beds effectively enhance sedimentary storage of organic C, N and P, with the turnover of the organic pools
being controlled by physical processes as well as by mineralization.
KEY WORDS: Seagrass beds · Nutrient dynamics · Organic carbon · Nitrogen · Phosphorus · Sediment trap · Turnover

Published in MEPS Vol.
175
(1998) on December 17
ISSN: 0171-8630.
Copyright © Inter-Research, Oldendorf/Luhe, 1998
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