Publications by authors named "In Ae Huh"

The relationships between nutrient dynamics and the bacterial community at the water-sediment interface were investigated using the results of nutrient release fluxes, bacterial communities examined by 16S rRNA pyrosequencing and canonical correlation analysis (CCA) accompanied by lab-scale benthic chamber experiment. The nutrient release fluxes from the sediments into the water were as follows: -3.832 to 12.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • Recent weir construction in South Korea's rivers has led to sediment accumulation, raising concerns over water quality, which prompted a study on sediment oxygen demand (SOD) and its influencing factors.
  • The study collected muddy and sandy sediment samples from 24 sites during summer and autumn of 2016, measuring SOD through a laboratory incubation and analyzing pore water chemistry, including dissolved organic carbon and nitrogen levels.
  • Findings revealed significant seasonal and sediment type differences in SOD—higher in summer due to temperature effects and influenced by nitrogen processes—indicating that specific nitrogen-related components can predict and improve estimates of SOD variations.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

In order to understand the characteristics and dynamics of dissolved organic matter (DOM) in the sediment of rivers affected by impoundments, we examined the vertical profiles and the benthic fluxes of DOM in four different core sediments located at upstream sites of weirs in major rivers of South Korea. In three out of four sites, exponential accumulation of dissolved organic carbon (DOC) with depth was observed with the signature of seasonal variability. Except for the site displaying a below-detection limit of Fe(II), the general accumulation trends of DOC with depth was concurrent with the increases of Fe(II) and NH and the decrease of PO, signifying a close linkage of the DOM dynamics with anaerobic respiration via iron reduction, an important early diagenesis pathway.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Korean water quality managers are required to promptly develop national assessment standards for freshwater sediment quality due to the Four Major River Restoration Project in Korea in 2009. We conducted this study to develop sediment management standards (SMSs), determining obviously and severely polluted sediment, which could have adverse impacts on water quality and aquatic ecosystem. The SMSs values were derived from the 95th percentile of concentration distribution for organic matter and nutrients in sediment quality database.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF