• Medientyp: E-Artikel
  • Titel: The effect of a shift from macrophyte to phytoplankton dominance on phosphorus forms and burial in the sediments of a shallow hard-water lake
  • Beteiligte: Klamt, Anna-Marie; Hilt, Sabine; Moros, Matthias; Arz, Helge W.; Hupfer, Michael
  • Erschienen: Springer Science + Business Media, 2019
  • Erschienen in: Biogeochemistry
  • Sprache: Englisch
  • ISSN: 0168-2563; 1573-515X
  • Schlagwörter: ORIGINAL PAPERS
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  • Beschreibung: <p>In shallow lakes, increasing phosphorus (P) loading has often been accompanied by a shift from a clear-water, macrophyte-dominated state to a turbid state featuring phytoplankton dominance. The effect of a regime shift on P burial and P fractions in lake sediments, however, is poorly understood. We used sediment cores from a eutrophic hard-water lake (Lake Gollinsee, Germany) that had undergone a regime shift (in approximately 1917) to investigate the effect on the accumulation rate of P and on changes in P forms. The cores were dated using Hg contents and radioisotopes (¹²⁰ Pb, ¹³⁷Cs, and ²⁴¹ Am). A combination of total organic carbon to total nitrogen ratios (TOC: TN), δ¹³ TOC values, X-ray fluorescence calcium (Ca) counts, and sediment colour clearly distinguished sediment layers that were deposited during periods of macrophyte or phytoplankton dominance. The accumulation rate of total P (TP) in the sediments was 1.8 times higher after the regime shift and was associated with changes in the distribution of P fractions. The proportions of loosely-(NH₄Cl-extracted TP) and Ca-(HCl-extracted TP) bound P decreased significantly, whilst the proportions of biogenic P (NaOH-extracted NRP) and aluminiumbound P (NaOH-extracted SRP) increased significantly. A higher dry mass deposition rate, reduced burial of stable Ca-P complexes, and increased contents and proportions of the mobile iron-bound (BD-extracted TP) and biogenic P fractions in the near-surface sediment layers are assumed to have enhanced the internal cycling of P and hence to have helped to maintain a state of phytoplankton dominance.</p>