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The effect of benthic algae on phosphorus exchange between sediment and overlying water in shallow lakes: a microcosm study using 32P as a tracer
Authors:Xiufeng Zhang  Zhengwen Liu  Ramesh D. Gulati  Erik Jeppesen
Affiliation:1. Department of Ecology, Institute of Hydrobiology of Jinan University, Guangzhou, 510632, China
2. Institute of Geography and Limnology, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Nanjing, 210008, China
5. Sino-Danish Centre for Education and Research (SDC), Beijing, China
3. Department of Aquatic Ecology, The Netherlands Institute of Ecology, 6708 PB, Wageningen, The Netherlands
4. Department of Bioscience, Aarhus University, 8600, Silkeborg, Denmark
Abstract:Sediments are of key importance in determining the nutrient levels of water in shallow lakes as they can act as either source or sink for phosphorus (P) depending on environmental conditions, sediment characteristics, and external nutrient loading. We examined the role of benthic algae in the P cycling between sediment and overlying water in experiments using 32P as a tracer. Sediment and water samples were collected from Huizhou West Lake, a shallow, eutrophic waterbody located in Huizhou City, South China. Laboratory cultured benthic algae were transferred to cover the sediment core in tubes. When 32P was added to the water in experimental tubes containing sediment cores with and without benthic algae, 32P activity after 48 h was significantly lower in the tubes with algae, indicating that benthic algae removed P from the overlying water. When the tracer was injected into the sediment, 32P activity in the water overlying sediment with benthic algae was substantially lower than in tubes with naked sediment, suggesting that benthic algae reduce the release of sediment P. Oxygen levels were significantly higher in the upper 3 mm of the sediments covered by benthic algae; thus, we hypothesized that oxygen produced by the algae helps inhibit the release of P from the sediment. Our study demonstrates that benthic algae are capable of reducing P levels in water overlying the sediment, suggesting that loss of benthic algae during eutrophication triggered by impoverished light conditions may accelerate the shift in shallow lakes from a clear water to a turbid state.
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