Lake responses to reduced nutrient loading an analysis of contemporary data from 35 European and North American long term studies
Articolo
Data di Pubblicazione:
2005
Abstract:
SUMMARY
1. This synthesis examines 35 long-term (5-35 years, mean: 16 years) lake re-oligotrophication
studies. It covers lakes ranging from shallow (mean depth <5 m and/or polymictic)
to deep (mean depth up to 177 m), oligotrophic to hypertrophic (summer mean total
phosphorus concentration from 7.5 to 3500 lg L)1 before loading reduction), subtropical to
temperate (latitude: 28-65), and lowland to upland (altitude: 0-481 m). Shallow northtemperate
lakes were most abundant.
2. Reduction of external total phosphorus (TP) loading resulted in lower in-lake TP
concentration, lower chlorophyll a (chl a) concentration and higher Secchi depth in most
lakes. Internal loading delayed the recovery, but in most lakes a new equilibrium for TP was reached after 10-15 years, which was only marginally influenced by the hydraulic
retention time of the lakes. With decreasing TP concentration, the concentration of soluble
reactive phosphorus (SRP) also declined substantially.
3. Decreases (if any) in total nitrogen (TN) loading were lower than for TP in most lakes. As
a result, the TN : TP ratio in lake water increased in 80% of the lakes. In lakes where the
TN loading was reduced, the annual mean in-lake TN concentration responded rapidly.
Concentrations largely followed predictions derived from an empirical model developed
earlier for Danish lakes, which includes external TN loading, hydraulic retention time and
mean depth as explanatory variables.
4. Phytoplankton clearly responded to reduced nutrient loading, mainly reflecting
declining TP concentrations. Declines in phytoplankton biomass were accompanied by
shifts in community structure. In deep lakes, chrysophytes and dinophytes assumed
greater importance at the expense of cyanobacteria. Diatoms, cryptophytes and chrysophytes
became more dominant in shallow lakes, while no significant change was seen for
cyanobacteria.
5. The observed declines in phytoplankton biomass and chl a may have been further
augmented by enhanced zooplankton grazing, as indicated by increases in the zooplankton
: phytoplankton biomass ratio and declines in the chl a : TP ratio at a summer mean TP
concentration of <100-150 lg L)1. This effect was strongest in shallow lakes. This implies
potentially higher rates of zooplankton grazing and may be ascribed to the observed large
changes in fish community structure and biomass with decreasing TP contribution. In 82%
of the lakes for which data on fish are available, fish biomass declined with TP. The
percentage of piscivores increased in 80%of those lakes and often a shift occurred towards
dominance by fish species characteristic of less eutrophic waters.
6. Data on macrophytes were available only for a small subsample of lakes. In several of
those lakes, abundance, coverage, plant volume inhabited or depth distribution of
submerged macrophytes increased during oligotrophication, but in others no changes
were observed despite greater water clarity.
7. Recovery of lakes after nutrient loading reduction may be confounded by concomitant
environmental changes such as global warming. However, effects of global change
are likely to run counter to reductions in nutrient loading rather than reinforcing
re-oligotrophication.
Tipologia CRIS:
01.01 Articolo in rivista
Keywords:
fish; macrophytes; nutrient; oligotrophication; plankton
Elenco autori:
Manca, MARINA MARCELLA
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