Monitoring the particulate phosphorus concentration of inland waters on the Yangtze Plain and understanding its relationship with driving factors based on OLCI data

Author(s):  
Shuai Zeng ◽  
Chenggong Du ◽  
Yunmei Li ◽  
Heng Lyu ◽  
Xianzhang Dong ◽  
...  
2018 ◽  
Vol 15 (6) ◽  
pp. 1683-1700
Author(s):  
Trent R. Marwick ◽  
Fredrick Tamooh ◽  
Bernard Ogwoka ◽  
Alberto V. Borges ◽  
François Darchambeau ◽  
...  

Abstract. Inland waters impart considerable influence on nutrient cycling and budget estimates across local, regional and global scales, whilst anthropogenic pressures, such as rising populations and the appropriation of land and water resources, are undoubtedly modulating the flux of carbon (C), nitrogen (N) and phosphorus (P) between terrestrial biomes to inland waters, and the subsequent flux of these nutrients to the marine and atmospheric domains. Here, we present a 2-year biogeochemical record (October 2011–December 2013) at biweekly sampling resolution for the lower Sabaki River, Kenya, and provide estimates for suspended sediment and nutrient export fluxes from the lower Sabaki River under pre-dam conditions, and in light of the approved construction of the Thwake Multipurpose Dam on its upper reaches (Athi River). Erratic seasonal variation was typical for most parameters, with generally poor correlation between discharge and material concentrations, and stable isotope values of C (δ13C) and N (δ15N). Although high total suspended matter (TSM) concentrations are reported here (up to ∼ 3.8 g L−1), peak concentrations of TSM rarely coincided with peak discharge. The contribution of particulate organic C (POC) to the TSM pool indicates a wide biannual variation in suspended sediment load from OC poor (0.3 %) to OC rich (14.9 %), with the highest %POC occurring when discharge is < 100 m3 s−1 and at lower TSM concentrations. The consistent 15N enrichment of the particulate nitrogen (PN) pool compared to other river systems indicates anthropogenic N loading is a year-round driver of N export from the Sabaki Basin. The lower Sabaki River was consistently oversaturated in dissolved methane (CH4; from 499 to 135 111 %) and nitrous oxide (N2O; 100 to 463 %) relative to atmospheric concentrations. Wet season flows (October–December and March–May) carried > 80 % of the total load for TSM (∼ 86 %), POC (∼ 89 %), dissolved organic carbon (DOC; ∼ 81 %), PN (∼ 89 %) and particulate phosphorus (TPP; ∼ 82 %), with > 50 % of each fraction exported during the long wet season (March–May). Our estimated sediment yield (85 Mg km−2 yr−1) is relatively low on the global scale and is considerably less than the recently reported average sediment yield of ∼ 630 Mg km−2 yr−1 for African river basins. Regardless, sediment and OC yields were all at least equivalent or greater than reported yields for the neighbouring dammed Tana River. Rapid pulses of heavily 13C-enriched POC coincided with peak concentrations of PN, ammonium, CH4 and low dissolved oxygen saturation, suggesting that large mammalian herbivores (e.g. hippopotami) may mediate the delivery of C4 organic matter to the river during the dry season. Given recent projections for increasing dissolved nutrient export from African rivers, as well as the planned damming of the Athi River, these first estimates of material fluxes from the Sabaki River provide base-line data for future research initiatives assessing anthropogenic perturbation of the Sabaki Basin.


2001 ◽  
Vol 44 (11-12) ◽  
pp. 117-122 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. Majer Newman ◽  
T. Lynch

The Everglades is an oligotrophic ecosystem that is being adversely impacted by hydrologic changes and nutrient-rich runoff generated from urban and agricultural sources. The Stormwater Treatment Area (STA) Optimization Research and Monitoring program is mandated by the 1994 Everglades Forever Act and will assist the South Florida Water Management District in developing operational strategies that maximize performance of emergent macrophyte STAs. The primary objective of this research is to examine how hydrologic conditions may influence STA performance. The study was conducted in 0.2 ha, shallow, fully lined test cells located within the perimeter of the Everglades Nutrient Removal Project. Experiments were designed to examine the effect of increased and decreased hydraulic loading rate (HLR) on wetland performance and to determine, if possible, the HLR at which STA treatment fails to reduce outflow total phosphorus concentration to the interim target of 50 μg-P/L. To date, two HLR experiments have been completed at the north site. Preliminary data indicated at all HLRs tested that particulate phosphorus and dissolved organic phosphorus ratios remained virtually unchanged from inflow to outflow. The dissolved organic and particulate compounds within these test cells are extremely recalcitrant, and are not easily assimilated within the system. High HLRs may not result in detention times long enough to mineralize these forms into easily assimilated inorganic compounds, resulting in mean TP concentrations greater than 50 μg-P/L.


2016 ◽  
Vol 227 (11) ◽  
Author(s):  
Rakesh K. Gelda ◽  
Steven W. Effler ◽  
Anthony R. Prestigiacomo ◽  
Feng Peng ◽  
Martin T. Auer ◽  
...  

1983 ◽  
Vol 40 (10) ◽  
pp. 1770-1778 ◽  
Author(s):  
Robert Henry Peters

The size distribution of epilimnetic plankton at four sites of differing trophic state was examined from May 1977 to May 1978 to examine the applicability to lakes of Sheldon's hypothesis that logarithmically ordered size classes contain approximately constant concentrations of biomass. The plankton was sized by serial filtration through a series of screens of mesh size 102, 75, 55, 35, 20, and 10 μm and a 0.45-μm Millipore filter. Biomass in each fraction was measured as particulate phosphorus concentration. I tested the hypothesis by examining the fit of regressions of particulate P concentration in each sequential fraction against the logarithm of the geometric mean of the meshes used to delimit that fraction. Sheldon's hypothesis leads one to expect a linear relationship. In most cases this was found but exceptions were common, and some size classes contained significantly more or less P than the linear model (Sheldon's hypothesis) would suggest. Comparison of the amount of P in the size classes I studied with previous estimates of the biomass of zooplankton and fish suggest that larger organisms may also fit the relation. The slope and intercept of these regressions between biomass and filter size increase with lake trophic state. This may allow an approximate prediction of community size structure in other lakes based on measured or predicted concentrations of total phosphorus.


2000 ◽  
Vol 42 (10-11) ◽  
pp. 257-264 ◽  
Author(s):  
E. Gómez ◽  
J. Paing ◽  
C. Casellas ◽  
B. Picot

The waste stabilization pond (WSP) systems are useful for the treatment of wastewater. Despite a good knowledge of these systems, the dynamics of phosphorus elimination in these systems are not well known, especially concerning the forms of phosphorus in the sediment. Phosphorus dynamics were studied with data collected from the three stabilization ponds of the Mèze (France) system. A conceptual model based on theoretical considerations was developed, and applied to each pond. The percentage of observed variation described by these models ranged between 46.2% and 74.1%. The results showed that the principal variables affecting orthophosphate in WSP systems were phosphorus input and particulate phosphorus. When the model was applied to high rate algal pond (HRAP) data, the role of photosynthesis on pH increase and P precipitation was clear. Sediments sampled in the three facultative ponds were characterised with a fractionation scheme, currently used for sediments of natural aquatic ecosystems. Inorganic phosphorus accounted for 92-94% of total sediment phosphorus, with 57–59% bound to iron hydroxides and 33–37% bound to calcium. Surprisingly, organic phosphorus represented only between 6 and 8%. Polyphosphate was detected. Phosphorus concentration was greatest in the sediment from the third pond, where an aerobic layer at the sediment surface prevented phosphorus release.


2002 ◽  
Vol 42 (7) ◽  
pp. 953 ◽  
Author(s):  
P. S. Cornish ◽  
R. Hallissey ◽  
E. Hollinger

Research on management practices that aim to reduce phosphorus in runoff from agricultural land has been hampered by the need to study large catchments over relatively long time periods to account for both the temporal and spatial effects of scale. The concentrations of pollutants such as phosphorus in runoff, similarly to suspended sediment, may diminish with increasing catchment scale. However, the runoff from well-covered dairy pastures contains predominantly soluble rather than particulate phosphorus. This paper examines the hypothesis that the concentration of soluble phosphorus in runoff from dairy pastures is insensitive to scale, and that small-plot rainfall simulators can be used to estimate concentrations of phosphorus in runoff at the farm or subcatchment scale.Over 2 years and 9 runoff events, the mean concentration of soluble phosphorus in runoff from a 140 ha dairy farm (0.95 mg/L) was not significantly different from a 4 ha representative subcatchment (paddock) within the dairy farm (0.66 mg/L). Relative concentrations from the 2 sources varied between events, depending on the duration of the runoff event. This variation was attributed to changes in the relative importance of different source areas as events progressed; runoff from the more distant parts of the larger catchment area, typically in higher positions in the landscape, apparently increased in importance in longer events.A hand-held rainfall simulator, with plots of only 1 m2, provided a quick, useful estimate of soluble phosphorus concentration in runoff. The mean concentration of soluble phosphorus in runoff from simulated rainfall at 9�locations in the 4 ha paddock (0.64 mg/L) was very similar to the value obtained from the paddock over a 2-year period (0.66 mg/L). We conclude that the concentration of soluble phosphorus in runoff from dairy pasture does depend on scale, and other variables, but the effect of scale was small for the catchment studied. A rainfall simulator may be used, with adequate replication, to estimate the soluble phosphorus concentrations in runoff that could be expected from dairy pastures over much larger areas.


Author(s):  
P. S. Maitland ◽  
A. V. Holden
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