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Internal loading of phosphate in Lake Erie Central Basin. | LitMetric

Internal loading of phosphate in Lake Erie Central Basin.

Sci Total Environ

United States Geological Survey, 345 Middlefield Rd, Menlo Park, California 94025-0434, USA.

Published: February 2017

AI Article Synopsis

  • Despite reductions in external phosphorus loads since the 1980s, Lake Erie's water quality has worsened over the last decade, marked by increased harmful algal blooms and hypoxic conditions.
  • Researchers are investigating phosphorus cycling in the lake by studying pore-water phosphorus concentrations and sediment cores to quantify phosphorus flux from sediments.
  • Estimates indicate that the phosphorus sediment flux to Lake Erie’s central basin ranges from 300 to 2400 metric tons per year, suggesting that sediments are a significant internal source of phosphorus, contributing 8-20% of the total external phosphorus input.

Article Abstract

After significant reductions in external phosphorus (P) loads, and subsequent water quality improvements in the early 1980s, the water quality of Lake Erie has declined considerably over the past decade. The frequency and magnitude of harmful algal blooms (primarily in the western basin) and the extent of hypoxic bottom waters in the central basin have increased. The decline in ecosystem health, despite meeting goals for external P loads, has sparked a renewed effort to understand P cycling in the lake. We use pore-water P concentration profiles and sediment cores incubation experiments to quantify the P flux from Lake Erie central basin sediments. In addition, the oxygen isotopes of phosphate were investigated to assess the isotopic signature of sedimentary phosphate inputs relative to the isotopic signature of phosphate in lake water. Extrapolating the total P sediment flux based on the pore-water profiles to the whole area of the central basin ranged from 300 to 1250metric tons per year and using the flux based on core incubation experiments an annual flux of roughly 2400metric tons of P is calculated. These estimates amount to 8-20% of the total external input of P to Lake Erie. The isotopic signature of phosphate in the extractable fraction of the sediments (~18‰) can explain the non-equilibrium isotope values of dissolved phosphate in the deep water of the central basin of Lake Erie, and this is consistent with sediments as an important internal source of P in the Lake.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.scitotenv.2016.11.133DOI Listing

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