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Effect of a nitrogen pulse on ecosystem N processing at different temperatures: A mesocosm experiment with 15 NO 3 − addition
Author(s) -
Olsen Saara,
Cao Yu,
Florencia Gutierrez María,
Brucet Sandra,
Landkildehus Frank,
Lauridsen Torben L.,
Davidson Thomas A.,
Søndergaard Martin,
Jeppesen Erik,
RisgaardPetersen Nils
Publication year - 2017
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 - 10.1111/fwb.12940
Subject(s) - mesocosm , macrophyte , algae , nitrogen , ecosystem , biomass (ecology) , phosphorus , zoology , environmental science , nutrient , aquatic ecosystem , eutrophication , aquatic plant , environmental chemistry , ecology , hydrology (agriculture) , chemistry , biology , geology , geotechnical engineering , organic chemistry
Shallow lakes may play an important role for the nitrogen (N) balance in drainage basins by processing, transferring and retaining N inputs. An increase in the frequency of storm‐induced short‐term N pulses and increased water temperatures are both likely outcomes of climate change, potentially affecting the N processing in lakes. An experiment with a K 15 NO 3 − pulse addition (increase in NO 3 − concentration from c. 0.1 to 2 mg/L) was carried out in 12 mesocosms with relatively low (applies to Danish lakes) total N ( TN ) and total phosphorus ( TP ) concentrations ( c . 0.3 mg N L −1 and 0.04 mg P L −1 ) to assess the effects of an N pulse on N processing and storage in shallow lake ecosystems. The mesocosms have a hydraulic retention time of approximately two and a half months, and at the time of the experiment, they had been adapted to contrasting temperatures for a period of 10 years: ambient, T3 (heating according to the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change 2007 A2 scenario, +3.7–4.5°C, depending on season) and T5 (heating with A2 + 50%, +4.9–6.6°C). Macrophytes and filamentous algae retained up to 40% and 30% of the added 15 N, respectively, reflecting their high biomass in the mesocosms. Macrophytes and filamentous algae constituted between 70% and 80% of the biomass of all primary producers during the experiment in the T3 and ambient treatments and between 20% and 40% in T5. By comparison, less than 1% of the added 15 N diffused to the sediment and less than 5% was lost to the atmosphere as N 2 gas. Snails represented the long‐term storage of 15 N, retaining up to 6% of the tracer and with detectable enrichment 100 days after tracer addition. We found no significant differences among the temperature treatments in the 15 N turnover after pulse dosing. However, a larger percentage of 15 N was stored in macrophytes in the ambient and T3 mesocosms, reflecting higher biomasses than in T5 where filamentous algae were more abundant. Macrophytes and filamentous algae rather than temperature were therefore key controllers of N processing during the summer N pulse in these shallow, relatively low TP lakes.