Species-specific functional trait responses of canopy-forming and rosette-forming macrophytes to nitrogen loading: Implications for water–sediment interactions

[Display omitted] •New framework links macrophytes to water–sediment systems under nitrogen loading.•Functional trait responses in macrophytes resulting in specific feedback effects.•Myriophyllum spicatum growth inhibited, Vallisneria natans exhibited tolerance.•Macrophytes mitigated effects of nitr...

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Veröffentlicht in:Environment international 2024-03, Vol.185, p.108557-108557, Article 108557
Hauptverfasser: Tao, Min, Zhang, Chang, Zhang, Zhiqiang, Zuo, Zhenjun, Zhao, Haocun, Lv, Tian, Li, Yang, Yu, Haihao, Liu, Chunhua, Yu, Dan
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:[Display omitted] •New framework links macrophytes to water–sediment systems under nitrogen loading.•Functional trait responses in macrophytes resulting in specific feedback effects.•Myriophyllum spicatum growth inhibited, Vallisneria natans exhibited tolerance.•Macrophytes mitigated effects of nitrogen loading on overlying and pore water.•Rhizosphere eukaryotes exhibited increased complexity and connectivity. Globally intensified lake eutrophication, attributed to excessive anthropogenic nitrogen loading, emerges as a significant driver of submerged vegetation degradation. Consequently, the impact of nitrogen on the decline of submerged macrophytes has received increasing attention. However, a functional trait-based approach to exploring the response of submerged macrophytes to nitrogen loading and its environmental feedback mechanism was unclear. Our study utilized two different growth forms of submerged macrophytes (canopy-forming Myriophyllum spicatum, and rosette-forming Vallisneria natans) to established “submerged macrophytes-water–sediment” microcosms. We assessed the influence of nitrogen loading, across four targeted total nitrogen concentrations (original control, 2, 5, 10 mg/L), on plant traits, water parameters, sediment properties, enzyme activities, and microbial characteristics. Our findings revealed that high nitrogen (10 mg/L) adversely impacted the relative growth rate of fresh biomass and total chlorophyll content in canopy-forming M. spicatum, while the chlorophyll a/b and free amino acid content increased. On the contrary, the growth and photosynthetic traits of resource-conservative V. natans were not affected by nitrogen loading. Functional traits (growth, photosynthetic, and stoichiometric) of M. spicatum but not V. natans exhibited significant correlations with environmental variables. Nitrogen loading significantly increased the concentration of nitrogen components in overlying water and pore water. The presence of submerged macrophytes significantly reduced the ammonia nitrogen and total nitrogen both in overlying water and pore water, and decreased total organic carbon in pore water. Nitrogen loading significantly inhibited sediment extracellular enzyme activities, but the planting of submerged macrophytes mitigated their negative effects. Furthermore, rhizosphere bacterial interactions were less compact compared to bare control, while eukaryotic communities exhibited increased complexity and connectivity. Path modeling indicat
ISSN:0160-4120
1873-6750
DOI:10.1016/j.envint.2024.108557