Effects of increased phosphorus loading on dissolved oxygen in a subtropical wetland, the Florida Everglades

被引:0
作者
Paul V. McCormick
James A. Laing
机构
[1] Everglades National Park,Everglades Program Team
[2] South Florida Water Management District,Watershed Management Department
来源
Wetlands Ecology and Management | 2003年 / 11卷
关键词
Dissolved oxygen; Eutrophication; Everglades; Periphyton; Phosphorus; Sediment oxygen demand; Water quality standards; Wetlands;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
The Florida Everglades is an oligotrophic, phosphorus (P)-limited wetland that is experiencing eutrophication as a result of P-enriched agricultural runoff. Effects of P enrichment on diel water-column dissolved oxygen concentration (DO) profiles were measured along nutrient gradients downstream of agricultural discharges in two northern Everglades marshes and in field enclosures (mesocosms) exposed to different P loading rates. Reference (i.e., water-column TP < 10 μg/L) areas in the marsh interior were characterized by strong diel fluctuations in DO, and aerobic conditions generally were maintained throughout the diel cycle. Enriched stations (water-column TP elevated to between 12 and 131 μg/L) were characterized by dampened diel fluctuations and reduced DO, and the extent of these changes was correlated strongly with marsh P concentrations. Mean DO declined from between 1.81 and 7.52 mg/L at reference stations to between 0.04 and 3.18 mg/L in highly enriched areas. Similarly, minimum DO declined from between 0.33 and 5.86 mg/L to between 0 and 0.84 mg/L with increasing enrichment, and the frequency of extremely low DO (< 1 mg/L) increased from between 0 and 20% to as high as 100% in the most enriched areas. Diel oxygen profiles in P-enriched mesocosms declined progressively with time; all loading treatments exhibited similar DO during the 1st year of P loading, but concentrations declined significantly at higher loads by year 3. Reductions in water-column DO with increased P enrichment were associated with reduced oxygen production by submersed periphyton and macrophytes and increased sediment oxygen demand. Increased emergent macrophyte cover in enriched areas likely contributed to these changes by shading the water-column, which inhibited submerged productivity, and by providing inputs of nutrient-rich detritus, which increased oxygen demand. Declines in marsh DO are associated with other ecological changes such as increased anaerobic metabolism and an increase in invertebrate taxa that tolerate low DO. While background oxygen concentrations in wetlands can be lower than those in lakes and rivers, declines in water-column DO caused by eutrophication can result in biological impacts similar to those in other aquatic ecosystems.
引用
收藏
页码:199 / 216
页数:17
相关论文
共 49 条
[1]  
Belanger T.V.(1985)Dissolved oxygen concentrations in Florida's humic-colored waters and water quality standard implications Florida Scientist 48 96-107
[2]  
Dierberg F.E.(1989)Effects of macnutrient enrichment on the Florida Everglades Lake and Reser-voir Management 5 101-111
[3]  
Roberts J.(1989)Water quality, sediments and the macroinverteb-rate community of residential canal estates in south-east Queens-land, Australia: a multivariate analysis Water Research 23 1087-1097
[4]  
Belanger T.V.(1991)Growth, decomposition, and nutrient retention of Aquatic Botany 40 203-224
[5]  
Scheidt D.J.(1998) Crantz and Soil Science Society of America Journal 62 1460-1468
[6]  
Platko J.R.(1997) Pers. in the Florida Everglades Aquatic Botany 56 145-163
[7]  
Cosser P.R.(1980)Turnover of detrital organic carbon in a nutrient-impacted Everglades marsh Oikos 34 68-76
[8]  
Davis S.M.(1992)Marsh vegetation patterns and soil phosphorus gradients in the Everglades ecosystem Soil Science Society of America Journal 56 1492-1499
[9]  
DeBusk W.F.(1997)Seasonal oxygen depletion in the bottom waters of a Danish fjord and its effect on the benthic community Archiv fur Hydrobiologie 140 117-129
[10]  
Reddy K.R.(1996)Distribution of soil and plant nutrients along a trophic gradient in the Florida Everglades Journal of the North American Benthological Society 15 450-468