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  4. Primary and Net Ecosystem Production in a Large Lake Diagnosed From High-Resolution Oxygen Measurements
 
research article

Primary and Net Ecosystem Production in a Large Lake Diagnosed From High-Resolution Oxygen Measurements

Fernandez Castro, Bieito  
•
Chmiel, Hannah Elisa  
•
Minaudo, Camille  
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May 3, 2021
Water Resources Research

The rates of gross primary production (GPP), ecosystem respiration (R), and net ecosystem production (NEP) provide quantitative information about the cycling of carbon and energy in aquatic ecosystems. In lakes, metabolic rates are often diagnosed from diel oxygen fluctuations recorded with high-resolution sondes. This requires that the imprint of ecosystem metabolism can be separated from that of physical processes. Here, we quantified the vertical and temporal variability of the metabolic rates of a deep, large, mesotrophic lake (Lake Geneva, Switzerland–France) by using a 6-month record (April–October 2019) of high-frequency, depth-resolved (0–30 m) dissolved oxygen measurements. Two new alternative methods (in the time and frequency domain) were used to filter low-frequency basinscale internal motions from the oxygen signal. Both methods proved successful and yielded consistent metabolic estimates showing net autotrophy (NEP = GPP − R = 55 mmol m−2 day−1) over the sampling period and depth interval, with GPP (235 mmol m−2 day−1) exceeding R (180 mmol m−2 day−1). They also revealed significant temporal variability, with at least two short-lived blooms occurring during calm periods, and a vertical partitioning of metabolism, with stronger diel cycles and positive NEP in the upper ∼10 m and negative NEP below, where the diel oxygen signal was dominated by internal motions. The proposed methods expand the range of applicability of the diel oxygen technique to large lakes hosting energetic, low-frequency internal motions, offering new possibilities for unveiling the rich spatiotemporal metabolism dynamics in these systems.

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Type
research article
DOI
10.1029/2020WR029283
Author(s)
Fernandez Castro, Bieito  
Chmiel, Hannah Elisa  
Minaudo, Camille  
Krishna, Shubham  
Perolo, Pascal
Rasconi, Serena
Wüest, Alfred Johny  
Date Issued

2021-05-03

Publisher

American Geophysical Union

Published in
Water Resources Research
Volume

57

Start page

1

End page

24

Subjects

Metabolic rates

•

high-resolution free-water oxygen

•

measurements in Lake Geneva

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to filter the imprint of vertical dislocations

•

the diel oxygen signal

•

metabolism of Lake Geneva

•

net autotrophic

•

rich vertical structures and temporal dynamics

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

EPFL

EPFL units
APHYS  
Available on Infoscience
May 4, 2021
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/177820
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