96 research outputs found
Abiotic control of underwater light in a drinking water reservoir: Photon budget analysis and implications for water quality monitoring.
In optically complex inland waters, the underwater attenuation of photosynthetically active radiation (PAR) is controlled by a variable combination of absorption and scattering components of the lake or river water. Here we applied a photon budget approach to identify the main optical components affecting PAR attenuation in Lake St. Charles, a drinking water reservoir for Quebec City, Canada. This analysis showed the dominant role of colored dissolved organic matter (CDOM) absorption (average of 44% of total absorption during the sampling period), but with large changes over depth in the absolute and relative contribution of the individual absorption components (water, non-algal particulates, phytoplankton and CDOM) to PAR attenuation. This pronounced vertical variation occurred because of the large spectral changes in the light field with depth, and it strongly affected the average in situ diffuse absorption coefficients in the water column. For example the diffuse absorption coefficient for pure-water in the ambient light field was ten-fold higher than the value previously measured in the blue open ocean and erroneously applied to lakes and coastal waters. Photon absorption budget calculations for a range of limnological conditions confirmed that phytoplankton had little direct influence on underwater light, even at chlorophyll a values above those observed during harmful algal blooms in the lake. These results imply that traditional measures of water quality such as Secchi depth and radiometric transparency do not provide a meaningful estimate of the biological state of the water column in CDOM-colored lakes and reservoirs
Catchment tracers reveal discharge, recharge and sources of groundwater-borne pollutants in a novel lake modelling approach
Groundwater-borne contaminants such as nutrients, dissolved organic carbon
(DOC), coloured dissolved organic matter (CDOM) and pesticides can have an
impact the biological quality of lakes. The sources of pollutants can,
however, be difficult to identify due to high heterogeneity in groundwater
flow patterns. This study presents a novel approach for fast hydrological
surveys of small groundwater-fed lakes using multiple groundwater-borne
tracers. Water samples were collected from the lake and temporary groundwater
wells, installed every 50 m within a distance of 5–45 m to
the shore, were analysed for tracer concentrations of CDOM, DOC, total
dissolved nitrogen (TDN, groundwater only), total nitrogen (TN, lake only),
total dissolved phosphorus (TDP, groundwater only), total phosphorus (TP,
lake only), δ18O ∕ δ16O isotope ratios
and fluorescent dissolved organic matter (FDOM) components derived from
parallel factor analysis (PARAFAC). The isolation of groundwater recharge
areas was based on δ18O measurements and areas with a high
groundwater recharge rate were identified using a microbially influenced FDOM
component. Groundwater discharge sites and the fractions of water delivered
from the individual sites were isolated with the Community Assembly via Trait
Selection model (CATS). The CATS model utilized tracer measurements of TDP,
TDN, DOC and CDOM from the groundwater samples and related these to the
tracer measurements of TN, TP, DOC and CDOM in the lake. AÂ direct comparison
between the lake and the inflowing groundwater was possible as degradation
rates of the tracers in the lake were taken into account and related to
a range of water retention times (WRTs) of the lake (0.25–3.5 years in
0.25-year increments). These estimations showed that WRTs above 2Â years
required a higher tracer concentration of inflowing water than found in any
of the groundwater wells around the lake. From the estimations of inflowing
tracer concentration, the CATS model isolated groundwater discharge sites
located mainly in the eastern part of the lake with a single site in the
southern part. Observations from the eastern part of the lake revealed an
impermeable clay layer that promotes discharge during heavy precipitation
events, which would otherwise be difficult to identify using traditional
hydrological methods. In comparison to the lake concentrations, high tracer
concentrations in the southern part showed that only a smaller fraction of
water could originate from this area, thereby confirming the model results.
A Euclidean cluster analysis of δ18O isotopes identified
recharge sites corresponding to areas adjacent to drainage channels, and
a cluster analysis of the microbially influenced FDOM component C4 further
identified five sites that showed a tendency towards high groundwater
recharge rate. In conclusion, it was found that this methodology can be
applied to smaller lakes within a short time frame, providing useful
information regarding the WRT of the lake and more importantly the
groundwater recharge and discharge sites around the lake. Thus, it is a tool
for specific management of the catchment
Eutrophication Leads to Accumulation of Recalcitrant Autochthonous Organic Matter in Coastal Environment
Peer reviewe
Development and use of a bioeconomic model for management of mussel fisheries under different nutrient regimes in the temperate estuary of the Limfjord, Denmark
Coastal ecosystems worldwide are under pressure from human-induced nutrient inputs, fishing activities, mariculture, construction work, and climate change. Integrated management instruments handling one or more of these problems in combination with socioeconomic issues are therefore necessary to secure a sustainable use of resources. In the Limfjord, a temperate eutrophic estuary in Denmark, nutrient load reductions are necessary to fulfill EU regulations such as the Water Framework Directive (WFD). The expected outcome of these load reductions is an improved water quality, but also reduced production of the abundant stock of filter-feeding blue mussels, Mytilus edulis. This is expected to have significant economic consequences for the million-euro mussel fishing industry taking place in the Limfjord today. We developed a bioeconomic model that can be used to explore the consequences of load reductions for mussel fishery as practiced today, as well as potential management options, to obtain an economically and ecologically sustainable mussel fishery. Model simulations clearly demonstrate a substantial decrease in mussel production after the nutrient load reductions necessary to obtain the targets in the WFD. With today's practice, the mussel fishery in the Limfjord will not be profitable in a future, less eutrophic estuary. However, model simulations also revealed that mussel fishery can be profitable after implementation of the WFD with a reduction in the total fishing quota, fewer fishing vessels, and a higher fishing quota per vessel
Coupling bacterioplankton populations and environment to community function in coastal temperate waters
Bacterioplankton play a key role in marine waters facilitating processes important for carbon cycling. However, the influence of specific bacterial populations and environmental conditions on bacterioplankton community performance remains unclear. The aim of the present study was to identify drivers of bacterioplankton community functions, taking into account the variability in community composition and environmental conditions over seasons, in two contrasting coastal systems. A Least Absolute Shrinkage and Selection Operator (LASSO) analysis of the biological and chemical data obtained from surface waters over a full year indicated that specific bacterial populations were linked to measured functions. Namely, Synechococcus (Cyanobacteria) was strongly correlated with protease activity. Furthermore, seasons exerted a profound effect on the substrate utilization capacity and composition of the communities. However, the pattern of substrate utilization capacity could not be directly linked to the community dynamics. The overall importance of dissolved organic matter (DOM) parameters in the LASSO models indicate that bacterioplankton respond to the present substrate landscape, with a particular importance of nitrogenous DOM. The analyses exemplifies that high taxonomic resolution can reveal links between individual populations and bulk bacterioplankton functions, and that for some taxa rRNA analyses are a necessary descriptor when attempting to correlate functions with communities. The reconciliation of patterns from two different systems indicates that the identified drivers of bacterioplankton community functions may be of broader relevance in coastal temperate waters
Pigment signatures of algal communities and their implications for glacier surface darkening
Blooms of pigmented algae darken the surface of glaciers and ice sheets, thereby enhancing solar energy absorption and amplifying ice and snow melt. The impacts of algal pigment and community composition on surface darkening are still poorly understood. Here, we characterise glacier ice and snow algal pigment signatures on snow and bare ice surfaces and study their role in photophysiology and energy absorption on three glaciers in Southeast Greenland. Purpurogallin and astaxanthin esters dominated the glacier ice and snow algal pigment pools (mass ratios to chlorophyll a of 32 and 56, respectively). Algal biomass and pigments impacted chromophoric dissolved organic matter concentrations. Despite the effective absorption of astaxanthin esters at wavelengths where incoming irradiance peaks, the cellular energy absorption of snow algae was 95% lower than anticipated from their pigmentation, due to pigment packaging. The energy absorption of glacier ice algae was consequently ~ 5 × higher. On bare ice, snow algae may have locally contributed up to 13% to total biological radiative forcing, despite contributing 44% to total biomass. Our results give new insights into the impact of algal community composition on bare ice energy absorption and biomass accumulation during snow melt
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