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Dive into the research topics where Eusebi Vazquez is active.

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Featured researches published by Eusebi Vazquez.


Hydrobiologia | 2010

Organic matter availability during pre- and post-drought periods in a Mediterranean stream

Irene Ylla; Isis Sanpera-Calbet; Eusebi Vazquez; Anna M. Romaní; Isabel Muñoz; Andrea Butturini; Sergi Sabater

Mediterranean streams are characterized by water flow changes caused by floods and droughts. When intermittency occurs in river ecosystems, hydrologic connectivity is interrupted and this affects benthic, hyporheic and flowing water compartments. Organic matter use and transport can be particularly affected during the transition from wet to dry and dry to wet conditions. In order to characterize the changes in benthic organic matter quantity and quality throughout a drying and rewetting process, organic matter, and enzyme activities were analyzed in the benthic accumulated material (biofilms growing on rocks and cobbles, leaves, and sand) and in flowing water (dissolved and particulate fractions). The total polysaccharide, amino acid, and lipid content in the benthic organic matter were on average higher in the drying period than in the rewetting period. However, during the drying period, peptide availability decreased, as indicated by decreases in leucine aminopeptidase activity, as well as amino acid content in the water and benthic material, except leaves; while polysaccharides were actively used, as indicated by an increase in β-glucosidase activity in the benthic substrata and an increase in polysaccharide content of the particulate water fraction and in leaf material. During this process, microbial heterotrophs were constrained to use the organic matter source of the lowest quality (polysaccharides, providing only C), since peptides (providing N and C) were no longer available. During the flow recovery phase, the microbial community rapidly recovered, suggesting the use of refuges and/or adaptation to desiccation during the previous drought period. The scouring during rewetting was responsible for the mobilization of the streambed and loss of benthic material, and the increase in high quality organic matter in transport (at that moment, polysaccharides and amino acids accounted for 30% of the total DOC). The dynamics of progressive and gradual drought effects, as well as the fast recovery after rewetting, might be affected by the interaction of the individual dynamics of each benthic substratum: sand sediments and leaves providing refuge for microorganisms and organic matter storage, while on cobbles, an active bacterial community is developed in the rewetting. Since global climate change may favor a higher intensity and frequency of droughts in streams, understanding the effects of these disturbances on the materials and biota could contribute to reliable resource management. The maintenance of benthic substrata heterogeneity within the stream may be important for stream recovery after droughts.


Ecosystems | 2007

Effects of the Dry-Wet Hydrological Shift on Dissolved Organic Carbon Dynamics and Fate Across Stream-Riparian Interface in a Mediterranean Catchment

Eusebi Vazquez; Anna M. Romaní; Francesc Sabater; Andrea Butturini

A bstractThe stream–riparian interface, characterized by a dynamic and complex hydrology, is an important control point for nutrient fluxes and processing between terrestrial and aquatic systems. Predicted alterations in the discharge regime in Mediterranean climate regions make it necessary to understand the effects of abrupt hydrological transition between dry and wet conditions on the transport and fate of dissolved organic carbon (DOC) across the stream–riparian interface. In this study, the concentrations and fate of total DOC (TDOC) and a subset of four molecular weight fractions (<1 kDa, 1–10 kDa, 10–100 kDa, >100 kDa) were investigated in stream water and riparian groundwater during autumn of 2003 and 2004. The two study periods were characterized by contrasting antecedent hydrological conditions: the streamflow was interrupted in summer 2003 but was permanent in summer 2004. Comparison of the two study periods indicates that an abrupt dry–wet hydrological transition amplifies the water exchange across the stream–riparian interface and favors retention of up to 57% of the TDOC that flows across the interface. Furthermore, the efficiency of DOC retention across the stream-riparian interface also varies greatly depending on DOC molecular size. More than 70% of DOC fractions higher than 10 kDa were retained, whereas the smaller fraction (less than 1 kDa) was nearly conserved. Consequently, our study helps to clarify the effects of extreme hydrological events on DOC transport in running waters in Mediterranean regions.


PLOS ONE | 2013

Stream Hydrological Fragmentation Drives Bacterioplankton Community Composition

Stefano Fazi; Eusebi Vazquez; Emilio O. Casamayor; Stefano Amalfitano; Andrea Butturini

In Mediterranean intermittent streams, the hydrological fragmentation in summer and the successive water flow re-convergence in autumn allow exploring how local processes shape the microbial community within the same habitat. The objectives of this study were to determine how bacterial community composition responded to hydrological fragmentation in summer, and to evaluate whether the seasonal shifts in community composition predominate over the effects of episodic habitat fragmentation. The bacterial community was assessed along the intermittent stream Fuirosos (Spain), at different levels of phylogenetic resolution by in situ hybridization, fingerprinting, and 16S rRNA gene sequencing. The hydrological fragmentation of the stream network strongly altered the biogeochemical conditions with the depletion of oxidized solutes and caused changes in dissolved organic carbon characteristics. In the isolated ponds, beta-Proteobacteria and Actinobacteria increased their abundance with a gradual reduction of the alpha-diversity as pond isolation time increased. Moreover, fingerprinting analysis clearly showed a shift in community composition between summer and autumn. In the context of a seasonal shift, the temporary stream fragmentation simultaneously reduced the microbial dispersion and affected local environmental conditions (shift in redox regime and quality of the dissolved organic matter) tightly shaping the bacterioplankton community composition.


Science of The Total Environment | 2017

Quality and reactivity of dissolved organic matter in a Mediterranean river across hydrological and spatial gradients

E. Ejarque; Anna Freixa; Eusebi Vazquez; Alba Guarch; Stefano Amalfitano; Stefano Fazi; Anna M. Romaní; Andrea Butturini

Understanding DOM transport and reactivity in rivers is essential to having a complete picture of the global carbon cycle. In this study, we explore the effects of hydrological variability and downstream transport on dissolved organic matter (DOM) dynamics in a Mediterranean river. We sampled the main stem of the river Tordera from the source to the sea, over a range of fifteen hydrological conditions including extreme events (flood and drought). By exploring spatial and temporal gradients of DOM fluorescence properties, river hydrology was found to be a significant predictor of DOM spatial heterogeneity. An additional space-resolved mass balance analysis performed on four contrasting hydrological conditions revealed that this was due to a shift in the biogeochemical function of the river. Flood conditions caused a conservative transport of DOM, generating a homogeneous, humic-like spatial profile of DOM quality. Lower flows induced a non-conservative, reactive transport of DOM, which enhanced the spatial heterogeneity of DOM properties. Moreover, the downstream evolution of DOM chemostatic behaviour revealed that the role of hydrology in regulating DOM properties increased gradually downstream, indicating an organised inter-dependency between the spatial and the temporal dimensions. Overall, our findings reveal that riverine DOM dynamics is in constant change owing to varying hydrological conditions, and emphasize that in order to fully understand the role of rivers in the global carbon cycle, it is necessary to take into account the full range of hydrological variability, from floods to droughts.


Microbial Ecology | 2006

Microbial Availability and Size Fractionation of Dissolved Organic Carbon After Drought in an Intermittent Stream: Biogeochemical Link Across the Stream–Riparian Interface

Anna M. Romaní; Eusebi Vazquez; Andrea Butturini


Biogeochemistry | 2011

Dissolved organic matter composition in a fragmented Mediterranean fluvial system under severe drought conditions

Eusebi Vazquez; Stefano Amalfitano; Stefano Fazi; Andrea Butturini


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2008

Diversity and temporal sequences of forms of DOC and NO3-discharge responses in an intermittent stream : Predictable or random succession?

Andrea Butturini; Marta Álvarez; Susana Bernal; Eusebi Vazquez; Francesc Sabater


Hydrology and Earth System Sciences | 2004

Calibration of the INCA model in a Mediterranean forested catchment: the effect of hydrological inter-annual variability in an intermittent stream

Susana Bernal; Andrea Butturini; Joan L. Riera; Eusebi Vazquez; Francesc Sabater


Hydrological Processes | 2008

Modelling the non-linear hydrological behaviour of a small Mediterranean forested catchment

Chiara Medici; Andrea Butturini; Susana Bernal; Eusebi Vazquez; Francesc Sabater; Jaime Ignacio Vélez; Félix Francés


Archive | 2013

Fourteen years of hydro-biogeochemical monitoring in a Mediterranean catchment

Eusebi Vazquez; Vicenç Acuña; Joan Artigas; Susana Bernal; E. Ejarque; Ainhoa Gaudes; Irene Ylla; Eugènia Martí; Esther Mas-Martí; A. Guarch; Isabel Muñoz; Anna M. Romaní; Sergi Sabater; Francesc Sabater; D. von Schiller; Andrea Butturini

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Stefano Fazi

National Research Council

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E. Ejarque

University of Barcelona

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