4.7 Article

High irradiation and low discharge promote the dominant role of phytoplankton in riverine nutrient dynamics

Journal

LIMNOLOGY AND OCEANOGRAPHY
Volume 66, Issue 7, Pages 2648-2660

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/lno.11778

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Helmholtz Association

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The study highlights the importance of light irradiation and water flow in affecting phytoplankton biomass and corresponding nutrient dynamics in the eutrophic section of the German Elbe River. Phytoplankton growth is favored under high irradiation and low water flow conditions, which significantly impacts riverine nutrient uptake.
Rivers play a relevant role in the nutrient turnover during the transport from land to ocean. Here, highly dynamic planktonic processes are more important compared to streams making it necessary to link the dynamics of nutrient turnover to control mechanisms of phytoplankton. We investigated the basic conditions leading to high phytoplankton biomass and corresponding nutrient dynamics in eutrophic, 8th order River Elbe (Germany). In a first step, we performed six Lagrangian sampling campaigns in the lower river section at different hydrological conditions. While nutrient concentrations remained high at low algal densities in autumn and at moderate discharge in summer, high algal concentrations occurred at low discharge in summer. Under these conditions, concentrations of silica and nitrate decreased and rates of nitrate assimilation were high. Soluble reactive phosphorus was depleted and particulate phosphorus increased inversely. Rising molar C:P ratios of seston indicated a phosphorus limitation of phytoplankton, so far rarely observed in eutrophic large rivers. Global radiation combined with mixing depth had a strong predictive power to explain maximum chlorophyll concentration. In a second step, we estimated nutrient turnover exemplarily for N during the campaign with the lowest discharge based on mass balances and metabolism-based process measurements. Mass balance calculations revealed a total nitrate uptake of 423 mg N m(-2)d(-1). Increasing phytoplankton density dominantly explained whole river gross primary production and related assimilatory nutrient uptake. In conclusion, riverine nutrient uptake strongly depends on the growth conditions for phytoplankton, which are favored at high irradiation and low discharge.

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