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How does the vertical distribution of chlorophyll vary in littoral sediments of small lakes?
Author(s) -
Cyr Hélène
Publication year - 1998
Publication title -
freshwater biology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.297
H-Index - 156
eISSN - 1365-2427
pISSN - 0046-5070
DOI - 10.1046/j.1365-2427.1998.00319.x
Subject(s) - littoral zone , sediment , chlorophyll a , fetch , chlorophyll , substrate (aquarium) , geology , environmental science , waves and shallow water , hydrology (agriculture) , oceanography , geomorphology , biology , botany , geotechnical engineering
1. In this study, sediment chlorophyll profiles at twenty littoral stations in three oligo‐mesotrophic lakes were compared to test whether the vertical distribution of chlorophyll is related to site characteristics (light availability, temperature, physical disturbances) and whether these profiles differ between shallow and deep portions of the littoral zone. 2. The magnitude of chlorophyll peaks at the sediment surface did not vary with light intensity. Chlorophyll peaks in the shallow littoral zone had a weak tendency to decrease with increasing effective fetch. The magnitude of chlorophyll peaks at deeper sites was more closely related to water temperature than to substrate slope. 3. High chlorophyll concentrations were measured down to 1–3 cm in the sediments, both at shallow (< 2.5 m) and deep (4–10 m) stations. The depth to which high chlorophyll was found in sediments did not vary with effective fetch or sediment water content, two indices of wave disturbance in the shallow littoral zone, or with substrate slope, an index of sediment stability in the deep littoral zone. Sediment mixing is apparently not related to common indices of physical disturbances. 4. Between 8 and 100% of sediment surface chlorophyll was ‘retained’ 4–5 cm into the sediments. The proportion of chlorophyll ‘retained’ in littoral sediments increased with increasing depth, increasing lake productivity (total phosphorus concentration) and increasing lake pH. 5. Among‐core variability (standard error/mean) in chlorophyll concentration at the sediment surface ranged from less than 1% to 33% at different stations and was highest at shallow, exposed sites. These levels of variability are similar to those found in other periphytic communities.