Nitrogen saturation in stream ecosystems

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Date
2006-12
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Publisher
Ecological Society of America
Abstract

The concept of nitrogen (N) saturation has organized the assessment of N loading in terrestrial ecosystems. Here we extend the concept to lotic ecosystems by coupling Michaelis-Menten kinetics and nutrient spiraling. We propose a series of saturation response types, which may be used to characterize the proximity of streams to N saturation. We conducted a series of short-term N releases using a tracer ((NO3)-N-15-N) to measure uptake. Experiments were conducted in streams spanning a gradient of background N concentration. Uptake increased in four of six streams as NO3-N was incrementally elevated, indicating that these streams were not saturated. Uptake generally corresponded to Michaelis-Menten kinetics but deviated from the model in two streams where some other growth-critical factor may have been limiting. Proximity to saturation was correlated to background N concentration but was better predicted by the ratio of dissolved inorganic N ( DIN) to soluble reactive phosphorus (SRP), suggesting phosphorus limitation in several high-N streams. Uptake velocity, a reflection of uptake efficiency, declined nonlinearly with increasing N amendment in all streams. At the same time, uptake velocity was highest in the low-N streams. Our conceptual model of N transport, uptake, and uptake efficiency suggests that, while streams may be active sites of N uptake on the landscape, N saturation contributes to nonlinear changes in stream N dynamics that correspond to decreased uptake efficiency.

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Keywords
Michaelis-Menten, nitrate, nitrogen spiraling, nitrogen uptake, saturation, stable isotope, streams, transient storage, forest ecosystems, mountain stream, nitrate uptake, Phosphorus, periphyton, export, limitation, retention, nutrients
Citation
Stevan R. Earl, H. Maurice Valett, and Jackson R. Webster 2006. NITROGEN SATURATION IN STREAM ECOSYSTEMS. Ecology 87:3140-3151. http://dx.doi.org/10.1890/0012-9658(2006)87[3140:NSISE]2.0.CO;2