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level: STABLE CARBON AND NITROGEN ISOTOPES

Questions and Answers List

level questions: STABLE CARBON AND NITROGEN ISOTOPES

QuestionAnswer
what is an isotopesame element, same amount of protons, but different amount of neutrons and tus different masses
stable isotopes do notdecay over time
What is is the hydrogen (d2H) reference standard called?VSLAP / VSMOW
What is the carbon (d13C) reference standard calledVPDB
What is the nitrogen (d15N) reference standard called?AIR
What is the oxygen (d18O) reference standard called?VSMOW = Vienna Standard Mean Ocean Water
Why do we need isotope reference standards?Absolute isotope quantity is difficult to measure accurately, however, relative differences can be measured accurately. Common reference point/baseline to ensure accuracy, reliability and reproducibility of isotopes data from different laboratories and studies. Calibration, interlaboratory comparison, and quality control of procedures.
The belemnite (VPDB) is inorganic carbon, meaning that organic carbons will always be more .... as it contains less 13C than inorganic carbonsnegative
... is the partial separation of isotopes during physical or chemical processesisotopic fractionation
The two most relevant types of isotopic fractionation are:kinetic (results when rates or reactions or physical processes differ, e.g., biosynthetic pathways) and equilibrium (occurs because the thermodynamic properies of isotopically substituted species differ e.g., fractionation betwee inorganic carbon species in water)
The product is often isotopically ..... why the unused part is often isotopically ..depleted/more negative & enriched/more positive
If 100% of substrate is converted, then the isotopic composition of the product is ...to the starting substrateidentical
during kinetic isotopic fractionation, eutotrophic organisms fractionate ... 13C durig inorganic carbon uptake (CO2) in different degreesagainst (epsilon value works in the negative direction, larger number is larger fractionation)
What is rubisco ?Earth's most abundant enzyme, used by autotrophic organisms to convert CO2 into organic compounds via the Calvin-Benson pathway
What factors influence fractionation in autotrophsgrowth rate (fractionation is reduced at faster growth rates, more product), concentration of CO2 (more CO2 = pickier, more fractionation) & cell geometry (smaller, pickier, more fractoination)
fractionation is inconsistent due to limitations by for example .... Growth conditions are important!light & nutrients
Additional isotopic fractionation takes place during biosynthesis of lipids. Every step can encounter isotopic fractionation – the more downstream you are the more ... you will be – every enzyme can fractionatedepleted
13C-contents depends on ......... and environmental factors (e.g., pCO2 and growth rate for Rubisco)carbon acquisition pathway
Fractionation for rubisco:(straight chain) lipids (alkyl) most depleted, then isoprenoids and sugars are most positive (unused substrate)
Biomass is always depleted compared toatmosphereic CO2
Reversed TCA - occurs in some bacteria and some archaea. Fractionation:reverses tge way they produce compound. So sugars most depleted, then isoprenoid lipids then straight chain lipids/alkyl
reverse RCA is less impacted by CO2 thus it is generally also subjected to .... fractionation compared to atmospheric CO2less
Reductive acetyl CoA pathway, not cyclic pathway - used by some bacteria (eg sulphate reducers ) and archaea (methanogens). Fractionation:Very large fractionation compared to CO2, straigh chain lipids/alkyl & isoprenoids is super depleted vs biomass. Methanogens super depleted in d13C and dD(deuterium/hydrogen) as methane is aswell
Anammox fractionation by bacteriarelatively large fractionation, isoprenoid and alkyl lipids (straight chain) strongly depleted in 13C versus biomass (NH3 & NO2- into N2)
3-Hydroxy propionate pathway, used e.g. by phototrophic green non-sulphur bacteria. FractionationUses bicarbonate instead of CO2, it is more positive by about 7-8 permille than CO2 – so bacteria using this will already be more positive from the start -> biomass lil. depleted vs CO2, alkyl enriched vs CO2, isoprenoids more depleted compared to alkyl and biomass
3-Hydroxypropionate/4-Hydroxybutyrate pathway -> - Occurs in some hyperthermophilic Crenarchaeota and also in Thaumarchaeota (producers of crenarchaeol biomarker lipid)isoprenoids similar to biomass, DIC and sugars are enriched
We can use the known fractionations to determine the carbon acquisition pathway of a microbeAnalyse and compare CO2, biomass and lipids
C3 plants live in ... regions and are generally ... compared to C4 plantshumid & depleted (they depend on pCO2)
C4 plants live in ... regions and are generally ... compared to C3 plantsdry (predominantly grasses on savannahs) & enriched -> C4 plants have concentrating mechanism (limited exchange with atmosphere) -> fractionation does not depend on CO2
There are three types of carbon fixation mechanism in terrestrial higher plants:C3, C4, CAM
Fractionation in C3 plants is dependent of precipitation – fractionation will become ... during more dry weather-climateless
We can measure our biomarker lipid and then reconstruct C3/C4 plant n-alkanes can be used to reconstruct higher vegetation and differentiate between C3/C4, butDifferent contributions of different plant types with different 13C contents may bias the overall n-alkane isotope patterns -> no quantification possible, but at least reconstruct some changes in vegetation
What determines the isotopic composition of heterotrophs ? you are what you eat +- a few permilled13C of food source & biosynthetic pathways
methanotrophsvery depleted in d13C and dD
nitrogen isotopes are used for ... studies while carbon isotopes are used for ... studiesfood web studies (position)(because nitrogen increases by 3.5 permillle per trophic level and 13C much less) & food source
When amino acids are changed more strongly with the trophic level the N-isotopic composition is changed ...more strongly aswell
N2 -fixationhardly any isotopic fractionation, slightly negative N isotopes
negative n-isotopes of bulk sediment may point toN2-fixing cyanobacteria
Sedimentary 15N can give paleoenvironmental information on relative importance of N2-fixation (......15N) denitrification (......15N)negative & positive
What is this and what is it a biomarker of?porphyrins - nitrogen isotopes