@article{dixon_helms_kieber_avery_2014, title={Biogeochemical alteration of dissolved organic material in the Cape Fear River Estuary as a function of freshwater discharge}, volume={149}, journal={Estuarine, Coastal and Shelf Science}, author={Dixon, J. L. and Helms, J. R. and Kieber, R. J. and Avery, G. B.}, year={2014}, pages={273–282} } @article{dixon_osburn_paerl_peierls_2014, title={Seasonal changes in estuarine dissolved organic matter due to variable flushing time and wind-driven mixing events}, volume={151}, ISSN={["1096-0015"]}, DOI={10.1016/j.ecss.2014.10.013}, abstractNote={This study examined the seasonality of dissolved organic matter (DOM) sources and transformations within the Neuse River estuary (NRE) in eastern North Carolina between March 2010 and February 2011. During this time, monthly surface and bottom water samples were collected along the longitudinal axis of the NRE, ranging from freshwater to mesohaline segments. The monthly mean of all surface and bottom measurements made on collected samples was used to clarify larger physical mixing controls in the estuary as a whole. By comparing monthly mean trends in DOM and chromophoric dissolved organic matter (CDOM) properties in surface and bottom waters during varying hydrological conditions, we found that DOM and CDOM quality in the NRE is controlled by a combination of discharge, wind speed, and wind direction. The quality of DOM was assessed using C:N ratios, specific ultraviolet absorption at 254 nm (SUVA254), the absorption spectral slope ratio (SR), and the humification (HIX) and biological (BIX) indices from fluorescence. The NRE reflects allochthonous sources when discharge and flushing time are elevated at which times SUVA254 and HIX increased relative to base flow. During periods of reduced discharge and long flushing times in the estuary, extensive autochthonous production modifies the quality of the DOM pool in the NRE. This was evidenced by falling C:N values, and higher BIX and SR values. Lastly, a combination of increased wind speed and shifts in wind direction resulted in benthic resuspension events of degraded, planktonic OM. Thus, the mean DOM characteristics in this shallow micro-tidal estuary can be rapidly altered during episodic mixing events on timescales of a few weeks.}, journal={ESTUARINE COASTAL AND SHELF SCIENCE}, publisher={Elsevier BV}, author={Dixon, Jennifer L. and Osburn, Christopher L. and Paerl, Hans W. and Peierls, Benjamin L.}, year={2014}, month={Dec}, pages={210–220} }