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    Variation in particulate C : N : P stoichiometry across the Lake Erie watershed from tributaries to its outflow

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    Β© 2017 The Authors Limnology and Oceanography published by Wiley Periodicals, Inc. on behalf of Association for the Sciences of Limnology and Oceanography Human activities can cause large alterations in biogeochemical cycles of key nutrients such as carbon (C), nitrogen (N), and phosphorus (P). However, relatively little is known about how these changes alter the proportional fluxes of these elements across ecosystem boundaries from rivers to lakes. Here, we examined environmental factors influencing spatial and temporal variation in particulate Cβ€Š:β€ŠNβ€Š:β€ŠP ratios across the Lake Erie watershed from its tributaries to its outflow. Throughout the study, particulate nutrient ratios ranged widely (Cβ€Š:β€ŠN 2.0–25.8, Cβ€Š:β€ŠP 32–530, Nβ€Š:β€ŠP 3.7–122.9), but mean values were generally lower than previous estimates from different aquatic environments. Particulate Cβ€Š:β€ŠN ratios varied the least across all environments, but Cβ€Š:β€ŠP and Nβ€Š:β€ŠP ratios increased between tributaries and coastal areas and throughout the growing season in coastal environments. These ratios also differed temporally in offshore waters as particulate Cβ€Š:β€ŠP and Nβ€Š:β€ŠP were higher in the spring and summer and lower in the fall and winter. Particulate Cβ€Š:β€ŠP ratios also increased between the western/central and eastern basins indicating differential nutrient processing across the lake. These stoichiometric changes were associated with unique environmental factors among ecosystems as tributary stoichiometry was related to terrestrial land use and land cover, coastal ratios were a product of mixing between riverine and offshore waters, and offshore patterns were influenced by differences in temperature and particulate nutrient loading among basins. Overall, by studying changes in particulate Cβ€Š:β€ŠNβ€Š:β€ŠP ratios across the Lake Erie watershed, our study demonstrates the power of using mass balance principles to study nutrient transformations along the aquatic continuum
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