E. B. Bulygina
Woods Hole Research Center
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Featured researches published by E. B. Bulygina.
Environmental Science & Technology | 2014
Irina V. Perminova; Ivan V. Dubinenkov; Alexey Kononikhin; Andrey I. Konstantinov; Alexander Zherebker; Mantsa A. Andzhushev; Vasiliy A. Lebedev; E. B. Bulygina; Robert M. Holmes; Yury Kostyukevich; Igor Popov; Eugene Nikolaev
The objectives of this study were to identify molecular features characteristic to arctic DOM from the Kolyma River basin and to elucidate structural imprints induced by a choice of the sorption technique. To achieve this goal, DOM was isolated from the Kolyma River basin with a use of three nonionic sorbents: Amberlite XAD-8 resin, PPL- and C18 - SPE cartridges, and one anion exchanging resin-diethylaminoethyl (DEAE) -cellulose. The structural studies were conducted with a use of electrospray ionization Fourier Transform Ion Cyclotron Resonance (ESI FT-ICR) mass spectrometry and liquid state (1)H NMR spectroscopy. The DOM isolates obtained with a use of PPL and C18 cartridges were characterized with higher content of aliphatic compounds as compared to XAD-8 and DEAE-isolates. In total, for all arctic DOM isolates we observed predominance of hydrogen saturated compounds with high H/C values of identified formulas from FT-ICR MS data. (1)H NMR spectroscopy studies have confirmed this trend and revealed high contribution of alkyl-chain protons into the spectral density of the arctic DOM reaching 43% for PPL isolates.
Environmental Research Letters | 2013
Jorien E. Vonk; Paul J. Mann; Kelsey Dowdy; Anna Davydova; Sergey Davydov; Nikita Zimov; Robert G. M. Spencer; E. B. Bulygina; Timothy I. Eglinton; Robert M. Holmes
Pleistocene Yedoma permafrost contains nearly a third of all organic matter (OM) stored in circum-arctic permafrost and is characterized by the presence of massive ice wedges. Due to its rapid formation by sediment accumulation and subsequent frozen storage, Yedoma OM is relatively well preserved and highly biologically available (biolabile) upon thaw. A better understanding of the processes regulating Yedoma degradation is important to improve estimates of the response and magnitude of permafrost carbon feedbacks to climate warming. In this study, we examine the composition of ice wedges and the influence of ice wedge thaw on the biolability of Yedoma OM. Incubation assays were used to assess OM biolability, fluorescence spectroscopy to characterize the OM composition, and potential enzyme activity rates to examine the controls and regulation of OM degradation. We show that increasing amounts of ice wedge melt water in Yedoma-leached incubations enhanced the loss of dissolved OM over time. This may be attributed to the presence of low-molecular weight compounds and low initial phenolic content in the OM of ice wedges, providing a readily available substrate that promotes the degradation of Yedoma OC. The physical vulnerability of ice wedges upon thaw (causing irreversible collapse), combined with the composition of ice wedge-engrained OM (co-metabolizing old OM), underlines the particularly strong potential of Yedoma to generate a positive feedback to climate warming relative to other forms of non-ice wedge permafrost.
Journal of Geophysical Research | 2018
Sarah Ellen Johnston; Natalia Shorina; E. B. Bulygina; Taisya Vorobjeva; Anna Chupakova; Sergey Klimov; Anne M. Kellerman; François Guillemette; Alexander I. Shiklomanov; David C. Podgorski; Robert G. M. Spencer
Pan-Arctic riverine dissolved organic carbon (DOC) fluxes represent a major transfer of carbon from land-to-ocean, and past scaling estimates have been predominantly derived from the six major Arctic rivers. However, smaller watersheds are constrained to northern high-latitude regions and, particularly with respect to the Eurasian Arctic, have received little attention. In this study, we evaluated the concentration of DOC and composition of dissolved organic matter (DOM) via optical parameters, biomarkers (lignin phenols), and ultrahigh resolution mass spectrometry in the Northern Dvina River (a midsized high-latitude constrained river). Elevated DOC, lignin concentrations, and aromatic DOM indicators were observed throughout the year in comparison to the major Arctic rivers with seasonality exhibiting a clear spring freshet and also some years a secondary pulse in the autumn concurrent with the onset of freezing. Chromophoric DOM absorbance at a350 was strongly correlated to DOC and lignin across the hydrograph; however, the relationships did not fit previous models derived from the six major Arctic rivers. Updated DOC and lignin fluxes were derived for the pan-Arctic watershed by scaling from the Northern Dvina resulting in increased DOC and lignin fluxes (50 Tg yr 1 and 216 Gg yr , respectively) compared to past estimates. This leads to a reduction in the residence time for terrestrial carbon in the Arctic Ocean (0.5 to 1.8 years). These findings suggest that constrained northern high-latitude rivers are underrepresented in models of fluxes based from the six largest Arctic rivers with important ramifications for the export and fate of terrestrial carbon in the Arctic Ocean.
Environmental Science & Technology | 2018
Irina V. Perminova; Evgeny A. Shirshin; Andrey I. Konstantinov; Alexander Zherebker; V. A. Lebedev; Ivan V. Dubinenkov; N. A. Kulikova; Eugene Nikolaev; E. B. Bulygina; Robert M. Holmes
The objective of this study was to shed light on structural features which underlay intensity of long wave absorbance of natural organic matter (NOM) using 1H NMR spectroscopy. For this purpose, a set of the NOM samples was assembled from arctic and nonarctic sampling sites (the Kolyma river basin and Moscow region, respectively). It was to ensure a substantial difference in the humification degree of the isolated organic matter-the biogeochemical proxy of the long-wave absorbance of NOM. The assembled NOM set was analyzed using solution-state 1H NMR spectroscopy. The distribution of both backbone and exchangeable protons was determined using acquisition of spectra in three different solvents. The substantially higher contribution of nonfunctionalized aliphatic moieties CHn (e.g., materials derived from linear terpenoids, MDLT) in the arctic NOM samples was revealed as compared to the nonarctic ones. The latter were characterized with the higher content of CHα protons adjacent to electron-withdrawing groups which belong to carboxyl rich alicyclic moieties (CRAMs) or to aromatic constituents of NOM. We have calculated a ratio of CHn to CHα protons as a structural descriptor which showed significant inverse correlation to intensity of long wave absorbance assessed with a use of E4/ E6 ratio and the slope of absorption spectrum. The steric hindrance of aromatic chromophoric groups of the NOM ensemble by bulky nonfunctionalized aliphatic moieties (e.g., MDLT) was set as a hypothesis for explanation of this phenomenon. The bulky aliphatics might increase a distance between the interacting groups resulting in inhibition of electronic (e.g., charge-transfer) interactions in the NOM ensemble. The obtained relationships were further explored using Fourier transform mass spectrometry as complementary technique to 1H NMR spectroscopy. The data obtained on correlation of molecular composition of NOM with 1H NMR data and optical properties were very supportive of our hypothesis that capabilities of NOM ensemble of charge transfer interactions can be dependent on structural arrangement and relative abundance of nonabsorbing aliphatic moieties.
Estuaries and Coasts | 2012
Robert M. Holmes; James W. McClelland; Bruce J. Peterson; Suzanne E. Tank; E. B. Bulygina; Timothy I. Eglinton; Viacheslav Gordeev; Tatiana Yu. Gurtovaya; Peter A. Raymond; Daniel J. Repeta; Robin Staples; Robert G. Striegl; Alexander V. Zhulidov; Sergey Zimov
Journal of Geophysical Research | 2012
Paul J. Mann; Anna Davydova; Nikita Zimov; Robert G. M. Spencer; Sergey Davydov; E. B. Bulygina; Sergei Zimov; Robert M. Holmes
Geophysical Research Letters | 2013
Jorien E. Vonk; Paul J. Mann; Sergey Davydov; Anna Davydova; Robert G. M. Spencer; John D. Schade; William V. Sobczak; Nikita Zimov; Sergei Zimov; E. B. Bulygina; Timothy I. Eglinton; Robert M. Holmes
Global Change Biology | 2014
Paul J. Mann; William V. Sobczak; Madeleine M. LaRue; E. B. Bulygina; Anna Davydova; Jorien E. Vonk; John D. Schade; S. P. Davydov; Nikita Zimov; Robert M. Holmes; Robert G. M. Spencer
Biogeochemistry | 2008
Patricia Torres-Cañabate; Eric A. Davidson; E. B. Bulygina; Roberto García-Ruiz; José A. Carreira
Biogeosciences | 2015
Britta Voss; Bernhard Peucker-Ehrenbrink; Timothy I. Eglinton; Robert G. M. Spencer; E. B. Bulygina; Valier Galy; Carl H. Lamborg; Priya M. Ganguli; Daniel B. Montlucon; Steve Marsh; Sharon Gillies; Jenna Fanslau; A. Epp; Rosalie Luymes