Mobilization of sediment phosphorus by submersed freshwater macrophytes |
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Authors: | JOHN W. BARKO R. MICHAEL SMART |
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Affiliation: | Environmental Laboratory, Waterways Experiment Station, Vicksburg, U.S.A. |
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Abstract: | SUMMARY. The mobilization of sediment phosphorus (P) by three submersed freshwater macrophyte species was investigated on five different sediments. The study was conducted under controlled environmental conditions in lucite columns that enabled the separation of sediment and plant roots from the overlying P-free 'complete' nutrient solution. The species investigated ( Egeria densa, Hydrilla verticillata , and Myriophyllum spicatum ) had minor root systems (on a biomass basis), but were demonstrated to be fully capable of deriving their P nutrition exclusively from the sediments. Phosphorus absorption and translocation into shoots (i.e., mobilization) was substantial, and in some cases suggested a greater than 1000-fold turnover of interstitial water PO4-P over a 3-month period. Sediment P mobilization, a function of both plant growth and tissue P concentration, differed considerably among plant species and sediments. Phosphorus release from the species investigated appears to be primarily dependent upon tissue decay rather than excretory processes. The mobilization of sediment P by submersed macrophytes represents an important aspect of the P cycle, and may affect the overall metabolism of lacustrine systems. |
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