Nitrogen (N) removal along flowpaths to aquatic ecosystems is an important regulating ecosystem service that can help reduce N pollution in the nation's waterways, but can be challenging to measure at large spatial scales. Measurements that integrate N processing within watersheds would be particularly useful for assessing the magnitude of this vital service. Because most N removal processes cause isotopic fractionation, δN from basal food-chain organisms in aquatic ecosystems can provide information on both N sources and the degree of watershed N processing. As part of EPA's National Aquatic Resource Surveys (NARS), we measured δN of Chironomidae collected from over 2000 lakes, rivers and streams across the continental USA. Using information on N inputs to watersheds and summer total N concentrations ([TN]) in the water column, we assessed where elevated chironomid δN would indicate N removal rather than possible enriched sources of N. Chironomid δN values ranged from -4 to +20‰, and were higher in rivers and streams than in lakes, indicating that N in rivers and streams underwent more processing and cycling that preferentially removes N than N in lakes. Chironomid δN increased with watershed size, N inputs, and water chemical components, and decreased as precipitation increased. In rivers and streams with high watershed N inputs, we found lower [TN] in streams with higher chironomid δN values, suggesting high rates of gaseous N loss such as denitrification. At low watershed N inputs, the pattern reversed; streams with elevated chironomid δN had higher [TN] than streams with lower chironomid δN, possibly indicating unknown sources elevated in δN such as legacy N, or waste from animals or humans. Chironomid δN values can be a valuable tool to assess integrated watershed-level N sources, input rates, and processing for water quality monitoring and assessment at large scales.
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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8865614 | PMC |
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.scitotenv.2021.151867 | DOI Listing |
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