Soil legacy nutrients contribute to the decreasing stoichiometric ratio of N and P loading from the Mississippi River Basin

Author:

Bian Zihao12ORCID,Tian Hanqin13ORCID,Pan Shufen14ORCID,Shi Hao15ORCID,Lu Chaoqun6ORCID,Anderson Christopher1ORCID,Cai Wei‐Jun7ORCID,Hopkinson Charles S.8ORCID,Justic Dubravko9,Kalin Latif1,Lohrenz Steven10ORCID,McNulty Steven11ORCID,Pan Naiqing13,Sun Ge11ORCID,Wang Zhuonan1ORCID,Yao Yuanzhi112ORCID,You Yongfa13ORCID

Affiliation:

1. College of Forestry, Wildlife and Environment Auburn University Auburn Alabama USA

2. School of Geography Science Nanjing Normal University Nanjing China

3. Schiller Institute for Integrated Science and Society, Department of Earth and Environmental Sciences Boston College Chestnut Hill Massachusetts USA

4. Department of Engineering and Environmental Studies Program Boston College Chestnut Hill Massachusetts USA

5. State Key Laboratory of Urban and Regional Ecology, Research Center for Eco‐Environmental Sciences Chinese Academy of Sciences Beijing China

6. Department of Ecology, Evolution, and Organismal Biology Iowa State University Ames Iowa USA

7. School of Marine Science and Policy University of Delaware Newark Delaware USA

8. Department of Marine Sciences University of Georgia Athens Georgia USA

9. College of the Coast and Environment Louisiana State University Baton Rouge Louisiana USA

10. School for Marine Science and Technology University of Massachusetts Dartmouth New Bedford Massachusetts USA

11. Eastern Forest Environmental Threat Assessment Center, Southern Research Station U.S. Department of Agriculture Forest Service Research Triangle Park North Carolina USA

12. School of Geographic Sciences East China Normal University Shanghai China

Abstract

AbstractHuman‐induced nitrogen–phosphorus (N, P) imbalance in terrestrial ecosystems can lead to disproportionate N and P loading to aquatic ecosystems, subsequently shifting the elemental ratio in estuaries and coastal oceans and impacting both the structure and functioning of aquatic ecosystems. The N:P ratio of nutrient loading to the Gulf of Mexico from the Mississippi River Basin increased before the late 1980s driven by the enhanced usage of N fertilizer over P fertilizer, whereafter the N:P loading ratio started to decrease although the N:P ratio of fertilizer application did not exhibit a similar trend. Here, we hypothesize that different release rates of soil legacy nutrients might contribute to the decreasing N:P loading ratio. Our study used a data‐model integration framework to evaluate N and P dynamics and the potential for long‐term accumulation or release of internal soil nutrient legacy stores to alter the ratio of N and P transported down the rivers. We show that the longer residence time of P in terrestrial ecosystems results in a much slower release of P to coastal oceans than N. If contemporary nutrient sources were reduced or suspended, P loading sustained by soil legacy P would decrease much slower than that of N, causing a decrease in the N and P loading ratio. The longer residence time of P in terrestrial ecosystems and the increasingly important role of soil legacy nutrients as a loading source may explain the decreasing N:P loading ratio in the Mississippi River Basin. Our study underscores a promising prospect for N loading control and the urgency to integrate soil P legacy into sustainable nutrient management strategies for aquatic ecosystem health and water security.

Funder

National Aeronautics and Space Administration

National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration

National Science Foundation

U.S. Department of the Treasury

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

General Environmental Science,Ecology,Environmental Chemistry,Global and Planetary Change

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