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Outsized nutrient contributions from small tributaries to a Great Lake. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • Excessive nitrogen and phosphorus loading poses a significant threat to aquatic ecosystems worldwide, leading to eutrophication in various water bodies.
  • Research on tributaries feeding Lake Michigan shows that while few large tributaries deliver the majority of nutrients, smaller streams significantly contribute to nutrient loads and are more likely to support harmful algal blooms.
  • Recognizing the role of small tributaries in coastal eutrophication highlights the importance of expanding nutrient management efforts to these areas for protecting valuable nearshore ecosystems.

Article Abstract

Excessive nitrogen (N) and phosphorus (P) loading is one of the greatest threats to aquatic ecosystems in the Anthropocene, causing eutrophication of rivers, lakes, and marine coastlines worldwide. For lakes across the United States, eutrophication is driven largely by nonpoint nutrient sources from tributaries that drain surrounding watersheds. Decades of monitoring and regulatory efforts have paid little attention to small tributaries of large water bodies, despite their ubiquity and potential local importance. We used a snapshot of nutrient inputs from nearly all tributaries of Lake Michigan-the world's fifth largest freshwater lake by volume-to determine how land cover and dams alter nutrient inputs across watershed sizes. Loads, concentrations, stoichiometry (N:P), and bioavailability (percentage dissolved inorganic nutrients) varied by orders of magnitude among tributaries, creating a mosaic of coastal nutrient inputs. The 6 largest of 235 tributaries accounted for ∼70% of the daily N and P delivered to Lake Michigan. However, small tributaries exhibited nutrient loads that were high for their size and biased toward dissolved inorganic forms. Higher bioavailability of nutrients from small watersheds suggests greater potential to fuel algal blooms in coastal areas, especially given the likelihood that their plumes become trapped and then overlap in the nearshore zone. Our findings reveal an underappreciated role that small streams may play in driving coastal eutrophication in large water bodies. Although they represent only a modest proportion of lake-wide loads, expanding nutrient management efforts to address smaller watersheds could reduce the ecological impacts of nutrient loading on valuable nearshore ecosystems.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7668162PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1073/pnas.2001376117DOI Listing

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