Light-mediated thresholds in stream-water nutrient composition in a river network

The elemental composition of solutes transported by rivers reflects combined influences of surrounding watersheds and transformations within stream networks, yet comparatively little is known about downstream changes in effects of watershed loading vs. in-channel processes. In the forested watershed...

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Veröffentlicht in:Ecology (Durham) 2011-01, Vol.92 (1), p.140-150
Hauptverfasser: Finlay, Jacques C, Hood, James M, Limm, Michael P, Power, Mary E, Schade, John D, Welter, Jill R
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The elemental composition of solutes transported by rivers reflects combined influences of surrounding watersheds and transformations within stream networks, yet comparatively little is known about downstream changes in effects of watershed loading vs. in-channel processes. In the forested watershed of a river under a mediterranean hydrologic regime, we examined the influence of longitudinal changes in environmental conditions on water-column nutrient composition during summer base flow across a network of sites ranging from strongly heterotrophic headwater streams to larger, more autotrophic sites downstream. Small streams (0.1-–10 km 2 watershed area) had longitudinally similar nutrient concentration and composition with low (∼∼2) dissolved nitrogen (N) to phosphorus (P) ratios. Abrupt deviations from this pattern were observed in larger streams with watershed areas >100 km 2 where insolation and algal abundance and production rapidly increased. Downstream, phosphorus and silica concentrations decreased by >50%% compared to headwater streams, and dissolved organic carbon and nitrogen increased by ∼∼3-–6 times. Decreasing dissolved P and increasing dissolved N raised stream-water N:P to 46 at the most downstream sites, suggesting a transition from N limitation in headwaters to potential P limitation in larger channels. We hypothesize that these changes were mediated by increasing algal photosynthesis and N fixation by benthic algal assemblages, which, in response to increasing light availability, strongly altered stream-water nutrient concentration and stoichiometry in larger streams and rivers.
ISSN:0012-9658
1939-9170
DOI:10.1890/09-2243.1