AI Article Synopsis

  • The study examined several Italian and Chinese temperate lakes to understand how nutrients are recycled by microbial activity, focusing on the roles of nitrogen and phosphorus in both oligo- and eutrophic conditions.
  • In eutrophic lakes, high levels of algae and organic carbon boosted bacterial activity, leading to greater phosphorus release and nutrient regeneration, indicated by the relationship between enzyme activities and algal biomass.
  • In contrast, oligo-mesotrophic lakes showed low nitrogen and phosphorus levels, resulting in different enzyme activities that hindered nutrient regeneration, relying heavily on sediment supplies for nutrient needs.

Article Abstract

Several Italian and Chinese temperate lakes with soluble reactive phosphorus concentrations < 0.015 mg L were studied to estimate nitrogen and phosphorus regeneration mediated by microbial decomposition and possible different mechanisms driven by prevailing oligo- or eutrophic conditions. Leucine aminopeptidase (LAP), beta-glucosidase (GLU) and alkaline phosphatase (AP), algal, and bacterial biomass were related to trophic and environmental variables. In the eutrophic lakes, high algal and particulate organic carbon concentrations stimulated bacterial respiration (> 20 μg C L h) and could favor the release of inorganic phosphorus. High extracellular enzyme activities and phosphorus solubilizing bacteria abundance in sediments accelerated nutrient regeneration. In these conditions, the positive GLU-AP relationship suggested the coupling of carbon and phosphorus regeneration; an efficient phosphorus regeneration and high nitrogen levels (up to 0.067 and 0.059 mg L NH and NO in Italy; 0.631 and 1.496 mg L NH and NO in China) led to chlorophyll a peaks of 14.9 and 258.4 μg L in Italy and China, respectively, and a typical algal composition. Conversely, in the oligo-mesotrophic lakes, very low nitrogen levels (in Italy, 0.001 and 0.005 mg L NH and NO, respectively, versus 0.053 and 0.371 mg L in China) induced high LAP, while low phosphorus (33.6 and 46.3 μg L total P in Italy and China, respectively) led to high AP. In these lakes, nitrogen and phosphorus regeneration were coupled, as shown by positive LAP-AP relationship; however, the nutrient demand could not be completely met without the supply from sediments, due to low enzymatic activity and phosphorus solubilizing bacteria found in this compartment.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11356-018-3144-2DOI Listing

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