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How do chronic nutrient loading and the duration of nutrient pulses affect nutrient uptake in headwater streams?

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Our study aimed to analyze the effects of chronic nutrient loading on the capacity of headwater streams to retain phosphorus and ammonium pulses of different duration. For this purpose, we… Click to show full abstract

Our study aimed to analyze the effects of chronic nutrient loading on the capacity of headwater streams to retain phosphorus and ammonium pulses of different duration. For this purpose, we selected nine headwater streams located across a gradient of increasing agricultural land use and eutrophication. In each stream, we performed sequential plateau additions with increasing nutrient concentrations in summer 2015 and instantaneous slug additions in summer 2016 under similar hydrological conditions. We modelled kinetic uptake curves from the slug additions via the Tracer Additions for Spiraling Curve Characterization method and calculated ambient uptake parameters. Ambient uptake rates generally increased (1.4–20.8 µg m−2 s−1 for NH4–N and 0.3–10.3 µg m−2 s−1 for SRP, respectively), while ambient uptake velocities decreased from oligotrophic to polytrophic streams (1.8–14.0 mm min−1 for NH4–N and 1.6–9.9 mm min−1 for SRP, respectively). However, correlations between ambient uptake parameters and background concentrations were weak. Concentration-dependent uptake rates followed either a linear or a Michaelis–Menten saturation model, regardless of the degree of nutrient loading. Uptake rate curves showed counter-clockwise hysteresis in oligotrophic streams and clockwise hysteresis in streams of higher trophic states, indicating a reduced significance of hyporheic uptake with increasing nutrient loading. Comparisons of slug and plateau additions revealed that oligotrophic streams were most efficient in uptake during short nutrient pulses, while eutrophic streams profited from longer pulse duration. The results indicate that nutrient uptake is increasingly transport-controlled in polluted streams where increased biofilm thickness and clogging of sediments restrict nutrient transport to reactive sites.

Keywords: nutrient pulses; headwater streams; duration; ambient uptake; nutrient loading; chronic nutrient

Journal Title: Biogeochemistry
Year Published: 2018

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