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Shallow lakes have a tendency to settle into turbid or clear-water states, the latter having lower concentrations of total phosphorus (TP). However, how P-cycling is affected by and perhaps contributes to maintaining the different states is not well understood, in part because quantifying the processes involved by traditional methods is difficult. To elucidate these processes, we conducted experiments using P-PO as a tracer on samples collected from the unrestored, unvegetated sections of Huizhou West Lake where turbid water prevails as well as the restored, clear-water, macrophyte-rich waters of the lake. We measured PO uptake rates, P-PO accumulation by various plankton size-fractions (picoplankton (0.2-2 μm), nanoplankton (2-20 μm) and microplankton (>20 μm)) as well as release rates of P-PO by labelled plankton. Our results revealed slow PO uptake in the turbid state due to low PO concentration, slow recycling of the high particulate P, and high levels of particulate P which may allow for continuous high growth and biomass of phytoplankton. In contrast, in the clear water state, the uptake of PO was rapid due to a higher PO concentration, the recycling rates of particulate P were high and the levels of particulate P were low, potentially constraining the phytoplankton growth. A greater proportion of particulate P was in the microplankton fraction in clear waters, suggesting that grazing by microplankton may play an important role in the rapid P recycling in clear-waters. Our results provide some evidence for a reinforcement of the turbid conditions (low recycling rate) when the lake is in a turbid state and vice versa when in the clear water state. The results add new knowledge to the understanding of P cycling in shallow lakes and illustrate the utility of using P-kinetics in contrasting states in plankton communities.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.scitotenv.2020.144357 | DOI Listing |
Sci Total Environ
September 2025
Environmental Change Research Unit, Faculty of Biological and Environmental Sciences, University of Helsinki, P.O. Box 65, FI-00014, Finland.
Small lakes are common across the Boreal-Arctic zone. Due to shallowness and high shoreline-surface area ratios, they are abundant in aquatic macrophytes. Vegetated littoral zones have been suggested to count as wetlands when quantifying carbon sinks and sources, but the actual magnitude of aquatic vegetation is seldom quantified.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWater Res
August 2025
Foreign Environmental Cooperation Center, Ministry of Ecology and Environment, Beijing 100035, PR China.
Shallow lakes are increasingly subjected to pronounced alterations in hydrological regimes and exacerbated nutrient stoichiometric imbalances due to climate change and anthropogenic factors. Understanding the interactions between watershed eco-hydrological processes and lake systems, particularly their impact on nutrient balance dynamics deserves further investigation. Employing seasonal-trend decomposition (STL), Copula modeling, and the Lindeman-Merenda-Gold (LMG) algorithm, this study systematically analyzed eco-hydrological processes in Poyang Lake basin and identified hydrological regime as the key factor governing lake nutrient balance.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEnviron Monit Assess
September 2025
State Key Laboratory of Lake and Watershed Science for Water Security, Institute of Geography and Limnology, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing East Road 73, Nanjing, 210008, China.
Dissolved carbon is a crucial component of freshwater ecosystems and plays an important role in the Earth's carbon cycle. This paper delivers a groundbreaking exploration of dissolved carbon (DOC and DIC) variations spanning 12 years in a eutrophic lake where nutrient levels are gradually declining to reveal their spatial and temporal distribution patterns and the key drivers behind this variation. Our findings indicate that both DIC and DOC concentrations in Lake Chaohu exhibit a westward spatial gradient, with an overall upward trend in DIC levels from 2012 to 2023, contrasting with a downward trend in DOC.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPLoS One
September 2025
Faculty of Biology, Aquatic Ecology, University of Duisburg-Essen, Essen, Germany.
Macrophytes in lowland rivers have traditionally been studied with a focus on surface water chemistry, particularly nutrients. However, unlike in lakes, the relationship between macrophytes and surface water nutrients in rivers is generally weaker, especially in highly alkaline lowland rivers, which are often found more downstreams. In these systems, elevated sediment nutrient levels may better explain macrophyte community compositions than surface water nutrients alone.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFYing Yong Sheng Tai Xue Bao
August 2025
Yunnan Key Laboratory of Plateau Geographical Processes and Environmental Change, Faculty of Geography, Yunnan Normal University, Kunming 650500, China.
Lakes are crucial terrestrial carbon sinks for the Earth's surface systems, where the burial and transformation of total organic carbon (OC) and inorganic carbon (IC) are strongly influenced by watershed surface processes. In alpine regions with limited direct human impact, long-term warming trends can enhance key proce-sses, such as algal growth and the mineralization of organic matter, thereby altering OC and IC accumulation and burial dynamics. We examined spatial patterns, synergistic relationships and controlling factors of carbon burial under regional warming across six alpine lakes in northwestern Yunnan (deep lakes: Dinggongniang Co, Gaigong Co Na, Wodi Co; shallow lakes: Dinggong Co, Bigu Tianchi, Shudu Lake), by employing multiple proxies including total nitrogen, chlorophyll, OC and IC contents, combined with climate reconstruction data.
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