Occurrence and driving forces of different nitrogen forms in the sediments of the grass and algae-type zones of Taihu Lake

Excessive nitrogen (N) load in sediments is at risk of release resulting in the degradation of grass-type lake ecosystems. At present, the occurrence characteristics of N forms and the driving forces of organic N (ON) hydrolysis in the sediments of Taihu Lake were still unclear. Here, 52 sampling si...

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Veröffentlicht in:Environmental science and pollution research international 2022-04, Vol.29 (20), p.30114-30125
Hauptverfasser: Zhao, Zihan, Zhang, Mingli, Tian, Jiaming, Yu, Kangkang, Chen, Yan, Wang, Yanhua
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Excessive nitrogen (N) load in sediments is at risk of release resulting in the degradation of grass-type lake ecosystems. At present, the occurrence characteristics of N forms and the driving forces of organic N (ON) hydrolysis in the sediments of Taihu Lake were still unclear. Here, 52 sampling sites in 7 lake areas in Taihu Lake were investigated to compare the spatial occurrence characteristics of the sedimentary free N (FN), exchangeable N (EN), acid hydrolyzable N (HN), and residual N (RN) and their associated driving forces. The results showed that the total N contents in the dry sediment ranged from 1811.56 to 5594.06 mg kg −1 , and the contribution was in the order of RN > HN > EN > FN. Spatially, RN and total organic carbon were significantly consistently influenced by dam construction and deposition algal residue. The HN concentration was high in the estuaries affected by N inputs from the rivers. The coupling relationship of spatial distribution between ON and N forms was revealed. The factors, i.e., algal residue deposition and terrigenous N inputs, were considered as the main driving forces stimulating the ON hydrolysis in the algae-type lake zones. It can be deduced that controlling terrigenous N inputs and sediment suspension may be the key to inhibiting the transformation from grass-type to algae-type lake ecosystem.
ISSN:0944-1344
1614-7499
DOI:10.1007/s11356-021-17784-w