1302 WATER: PROPERTIES, STRUCTURE, AND OCCURRENCE IN NATURE
isotopes aids the quantitative interpretation of biogeochemical
and environmental processes and cycles (Broeker, 1974).
Organic Carbon
The cycle of carbon in natural wastes is especially impor-
tant because it is interrelated with the cycles of all other
elements. Furthermore, the organic material produced in
the oceans constitutes one of man’s most significant marine
resources.
Most of the carbon in the earth’s crust has cycled through
organisms and plants; as a result it has been incorporated into
unstable but long-lived biochemical structures. Information on
the catabolic pathway of organic life substances permits pre-
diction of the type of organic substances to be found in natural
waters. Table 7 gives a greatly condensed and simplified survey
of the decomposition products of life substances and includes
an abbreviated list of specific organic compounds reportedly
found in natural bodies.
In fresh water bodies one typically encounters concentra-
tions of a few milligrams carbon per liter, but occasionally
(e.g., in bog or swamp waters) concentrations may be as high
as 50 mg C per liter. In the oceans the concentrations of organic
carbon range from 0.5 to 1.2 mg C per liter, with the higher
values occurring in the surface waters. Particulate organic
carbon, including planktonic organisms, generally accounts for
TABLE 7
Naturally occurring organic substances
Life substances Decomposition intermediates
Intermediates and products typically found
in nonpolluted natural water
Proteins
Polypeptides RCH(NH ) COOH
RCOOH
RCH OHCOOH
RCH OH
R
aminoacids^2
2
→→ 2
CCH
RCH NH
3
22
⎧
⎨
⎪
⎪⎪
⎩
⎪
⎪
⎪
NH , CO , HS , CH , HPO , 42 4 4^2 peptides,
amino acids, urea, phenols, indole, fatty
acids, mercaptans
Polynucleotides Nucleotides → purine and pyrimidine bases CO 2 , CH 4 , aliphatic acids, acetic, lactic,
citric glycolic, malic, palmitic, steric,
oleic acids, carbohydrates, hydrocarbons
Lipids
Fats
Waxes
Oils
⎫
⎬
⎪
⎭⎪
Hydrocarbons
RCH CH COOH + CH OHCHOHCH OH
RCH OH
RCOOH
Shorter chain acids
R
22 2 2
2
→
CCH
RH
fatty acids glycerol 3
⎧
⎨
⎪
⎪⎪
⎩
⎪
⎪
⎪
Carbohydrates
Cellulose
Sta r ch
Hemicellulose
⎫
⎬
⎪
⎭⎪
C(HO)
monosaccharides
oligosaccharides
chitin
h
xy 2 →
⎧
⎨
⎪
⎩⎪
⎫
⎬
⎪
⎭⎪
→
eexoses
pentoses
glucosamine
⎧
⎨
⎪
⎩⎪
⎫
⎬
⎪
⎭⎪
HPO 42 , CO , CH 24 ,glucose, fructose,
galactose, arabinose, ribose, xylose
Lignin (C 2 H 2 O)x → unsaturated aromatic alcohols → polyhydroxy carboxylic acids
Porphyrins and Plant Pigments
Chlorophyll
Hemin
Carotenes and
Xantophylls
⎫
⎬
⎪⎪
⎭
⎪
⎪
Chlorin→→pheophytin hydrocarbons Phytane
Pristane, carotenoids Isoprenoid, alcohols,
ketones, acids
Porphyrins
breakdown intermediates, e.g., Complex substances formed from → Melanins, melanoidin, gelbstoffe
Phenols + quinines + amino compounds → Humic acids, fulvic acids, “tannic”
Amino compounds + breakdown products of carbohydrates substances
From Stumm and Morgan (1981).
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