S. Guildford, R. Hecky, P. Verburg, Anathea Albert
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引用次数: 2
Abstract
ABSTRACT Lakes on volcanic soils of the North Island of New Zealand, compared to north temperate lakes, have low total nitrogen:total phosphorus (TN:TP) ratios, low dissolved inorganic nitrogen concentrations during summer stratification, and have positive chlorophyll a responses to N additions more frequently than to P in nutrient enrichment bioassays. This response has resulted, in some cases, to the imposition of N loading caps on some lake catchments, in contrast to nutrient management in north temperate lakes focused more on P management. To explore this possible difference in limiting nutrients, a suite of nutrient status indicators based on measurement of ambient seston stoichiometry and metabolic activity, which have been widely used in north temperate lakes, were applied to 8 lakes on volcanic terrain with previously reported N limitation. These nutrient status measurements were previously calibrated to inform whether in situ phytoplankton are growth-rate limited and, if so, which nutrient is limiting growth rate. In austral summer 2015, all 8 lakes showed indications of P limitation, and P limitation was more extreme, pervasive, and persistent (among samplings) than N limitation. Indications of N limitation were not observed without contemporaneous evidence of P limitation, but P limitation was frequently observed without evidence of N limitation. One lake, Rotorua, was not strongly nutrient limited, and phytoplankton were likely growing at or near optimum growth rates. In this study the commonly used TN:TP ratio was a poor predictor of which nutrient was potentially limiting in situ phytoplankton.
期刊介绍:
Inland Waters is the peer-reviewed, scholarly outlet for original papers that advance science within the framework of the International Society of Limnology (SIL). The journal promotes understanding of inland aquatic ecosystems and their management. Subject matter parallels the content of SIL Congresses, and submissions based on presentations are encouraged.
All aspects of physical, chemical, and biological limnology are appropriate, as are papers on applied and regional limnology. The journal also aims to publish articles resulting from plenary lectures presented at SIL Congresses and occasional synthesis articles, as well as issues dedicated to a particular theme, specific water body, or aquatic ecosystem in a geographical area. Publication in the journal is not restricted to SIL members.