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Carbon sink to source: longitudinal gradients of planktonic P:R ratios in subtropical reservoirs
Authors:Margaret G Forbes  Robert D Doyle  J Thad Scott  Jacob K Stanley  Hui Huang  Barry A Fulton  Bryan W Brooks
Institution:1. Center for Reservoir and Aquatic Systems Research, Baylor University, Waco, TX, USA
2. Department of Biology, Baylor University, Waco, TX, USA
4. Department of Crop, Soil, and Environmental Sciences, University of Arkansas, Fayetteville, AR, USA
5. U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, Engineer Research and Development Center, Environmental Laboratory, Vicksburg, MS, USA
3. Department of Environmental Science, Baylor University, Waco, TX, USA
Abstract:Spatial patterns of planktonic production and respiration in the surface mixed layer were examined in eight Texas, USA reservoirs to test the hypothesis that P:R ratios are lowest in upreservoir inflow zones and highest in downreservoir open-water zones, as predicted by the heuristic reservoir zonation model. We measured summer planktonic metabolism with light–dark bottles and physical–chemical conditions in epilimnetic water at 85 sites distributed among sixteen longitudinal transects within the eight reservoirs (2 transects per reservoir). Volumetric production and plankton biomass were lowest in the open-water zones and increased upreservoir; however, that pattern was reversed for areal production due to greater photic depths at open-water sites. Volumetric respiration was similar in the three zones; however, corresponding planktonic P:R ratios in the surface mixed layer were significantly lower at open-water sites, which is opposite than hypothesized. Based on linear regressions of production and respiration rates on chlorophyll a, open-water sites were net heterotrophic during the summer regardless of trophic state; whereas inflow and mid-reservoir zone sites were heterotrophic when chlorophyll concentrations were respectively less than 9.5 and 35?mg?m?3. Although variation among reservoirs was high, five of the eight reservoirs had inflow zones that were net carbon sinks while seven had open-water zones that were carbon sources. Mean (±standard error) carbon flux rates of inflow, mid-reservoir, and open-water zones were ?0.22?±?0.12 (C sink), 0.39?±?0.44 (moderate C source), and 1.33?±?0.50 (strong C source) g C m?2 day?1 respectively. Inflow and mid-reservoir zones comprised approximately 45% of the total reservoir area studied. Therefore, omitting their contribution as often done when a single open-water site is sampled may substantially overestimate reservoir carbon flux.
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