4.5 Article

Controls of Benthic Nitrogen Fixation and Primary Production from Nutrient Enrichment of Oligotrophic, Arctic Lakes

Journal

ECOSYSTEMS
Volume 16, Issue 8, Pages 1550-1564

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s10021-013-9701-0

Keywords

benthic; nitrogen fixation; primary production; oligotrophic; Arctic; Toolik

Categories

Funding

  1. NSF-OPP [9732281]
  2. NSF-DEB [9810222, 0423385, 0206173]
  3. Small Grants Program through the NSF-IGERT Program in Biogeochemistry and Environmental Change at Cornell University
  4. Direct For Biological Sciences
  5. Division Of Environmental Biology [1026843, 0423385] Funding Source: National Science Foundation
  6. Division Of Environmental Biology
  7. Direct For Biological Sciences [9810222, 0206173] Funding Source: National Science Foundation
  8. Office of Polar Programs (OPP)
  9. Directorate For Geosciences [9732281] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

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We examined controls of benthic dinitrogen (N-2) fixation and primary production in oligotrophic lakes in Arctic Alaska, Toolik Field Station (Arctic Long-Term Ecological Research Site). Primary production in many oligotrophic lakes is limited by nitrogen (N), and benthic processes are important for whole-lake function. Oligotrophic lakes are increasingly susceptible to low-level, non-point source nutrient inputs, yet the effects on benthic processes are not well understood. This study examines the results from a whole-lake fertilization experiment in which N and P were added at a relatively low level (4 times natural loading) in Redfield ratio to a shallow (3 m) and a deep (20 m) oligotrophic lake. The two lakes showed similar responses to fertilization: benthic primary production and respiration (each 50-150 mg C m(-2) day(-1)) remained the same, and benthic N-2 fixation declined by a factor of three- to fourfold by the second year of treatment (from similar to 0.35 to 0.1 mg N m(-2) day(-1)). This showed that the response of benthic N-2 fixation was de-coupled from the nutrient limitation status of benthic primary producers and raised questions about the mechanisms, which were examined in separate laboratory experiments. Bioassay experiments in intact cores also showed no response of benthic primary production to added N and P, but contrasted with the whole-lake experiment in that N-2 fixation did not respond to added N, either alone or in conjunction with P. This inconsistency was likely a result of nitrogenase activity of existing N-2 fixers during the relative short duration (9 days) of the bioassay experiment. N-2 fixation showed a positive saturating response when light was increased in the laboratory, but was not statistically related to ambient light level in the field, leading us to conclude that light limitation of the benthos from increasing water-column production was not important. Thus, increased N availability in the sediments through direct uptake likely caused a reduction in N-2 fixation. These results show the capacity of the benthos in oligotrophic systems to buffer the whole-system response to nutrient addition by the apparent ability for significant nutrient uptake and the rapid decline in N-2 fixation in response to added nutrients. Reduced benthic N-2 fixation may be an early indicator of a eutrophication response of lakes which precedes the transition from benthic to water-column-dominated systems.

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