Winter atmospheric nutrient and pollutant deposition on Western Sayan Mountain lakes (Siberia)
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Published:2021-03-05
Issue:5
Volume:18
Page:1601-1618
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ISSN:1726-4189
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Container-title:Biogeosciences
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language:en
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Short-container-title:Biogeosciences
Author:
Diaz-de-Quijano Daniel, Vladimirovich Ageev Aleksander, Ivanova Elena Anatolevna, Anishchenko Olesia ValerevnaORCID
Abstract
Abstract. The world map of anthropogenic atmospheric nitrogen deposition and
its effects on natural ecosystems is not described with equal precision
everywhere. In this paper, we report atmospheric nutrient, sulfate and
spheroidal carbonaceous particle (SCP) deposition rates, based on snowpack
analyses of a formerly unexplored Siberian mountain region. Then, we
discuss their potential effects on lake phytoplankton biomass limitation. We estimate that the nutrient depositions observed in the late-season
snowpack (40 ± 16 mg NO3-N m−2 and 0.58 ± 0.13 mg TP-P m−2; TP for total phosphorous) would correspond to yearly depositions
lower than 119 ± 71 mg NO3-N m−2 yr−1 and higher than 1.71 ± 0.91 mg TP-P m−2 yr−1. These yearly deposition estimates would
approximately fit the predictions of global deposition models and correspond
to the very low nutrient deposition range, although they are still higher
than world background values. In spite of the fact that such a low atmospheric nitrogen deposition rate
would be enough to induce nitrogen limitation in unproductive mountain
lakes, phosphorus deposition was also extremely low, and the resulting lake water N : P
ratio was unaffected by atmospheric nutrient deposition. In the
end, the studied lakes' phytoplankton appeared to be split
between phosphorus and nitrogen limitation. We conclude that these pristine
lakes are fragile sensitive systems exposed to the predicted climate
warming, increased winter precipitation, enhanced forest fires and shifts in
anthropogenic nitrogen emissions that could finally couple their water
chemistry to that of atmospheric nutrient deposition and unlock
temperature-inhibited responses of phytoplankton to nutrient shifts.
Funder
Russian Foundation for Basic Research
Publisher
Copernicus GmbH
Subject
Earth-Surface Processes,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics
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