Title of article :
Effects of sediment and nutrient enrichment on water quality in the Archipelago Sea, northern Baltic: An enclosure experiment in shallow water
Author/Authors :
J. Suomela، نويسنده , , V. Gran، نويسنده , , H. Helminen، نويسنده , , A. Lagus، نويسنده , , J. Lehtoranta، نويسنده , , J. Sipura، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2005
Abstract :
The effects of bottom sediment and nutrient enrichment on water quality were studied in an enclosure experiment in the
Archipelago Sea, northern Baltic. The three-week experiment was conducted in a small and shallow bay, where the organic content
of the sediment is low. The enclosures were large (diameter 3.6 m, depth 3.5 m), and reached from the surface to the bottom. Some
of the enclosures included the natural sediment, some had a plastic bottom without contact with the sediment. Concentrations of
nutrients and chlorophyll a and physical variables in the water column, concentrations of inorganic nutrients in the pore water of the
sediment, and numbers and biomasses of the benthic macrofauna were measured. Both the presence of sediment and nutrient
enrichment significantly increased the concentrations of total nitrogen, total phosphorus and chlorophyll a in the water column. The
concentration of chlorophyll a doubled in the sediment-bottomed enclosures without nutrient enrichment; the increase was similar
to that in the plastic-bottomed enclosures with nutrient enrichment (7.2 mMNH4
C and 0.46 mM PO4 3 during the three-week study).
The concentration of silica doubled or tripled in the sediment-bottomed enclosures. No shortage of oxygen was found in the water
column during the experiment. The results show that sediment with a low content of organic matter may serve as an important
source of nutrients in shallow and littoral oxic waters and may be important in sustaining their eutrophic state during the productive
season. It is suggested that an important part of the nutrients released from this erosion bottom had originated from the surface
layer of the sediment, which had been sedimented and transported to the area quite recently. The results indicate that it is important
to include sediment in mesocosm studies dealing with nutrient dynamics, especially in shallow waters.
Keywords :
nitrogen , Benthic fluxes , Mesocosms , Phosphorus , sediment , eutrophication
Journal title :
Estuarine, Coastal and Shelf Science
Journal title :
Estuarine, Coastal and Shelf Science