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  4. Increasing carbon-to-phosphorus ratio (C:P) from seston as a prime indicator for the initiation of lake reoligotrophication
 
research article

Increasing carbon-to-phosphorus ratio (C:P) from seston as a prime indicator for the initiation of lake reoligotrophication

Müller, Beat
•
Steinsberger, Thomas
•
Stöckli, Arno
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April 2, 2021
Environmental Science & Technology

Decline in total phosphorus (TP) during lake reoligotrophication does not apparently immediately influence carbon assimilation or deep-water oxygen levels. Traditional monitoring and interpretation do not typically consider the amount of organic carbon exported from the productive zone into the hypolimnion as a measure of net ecosystem production. This research investigated the carbon-to-phosphorus ratios of suspended particles in the epilimnion, (C:P)epi, as indicators of changing productivity. We report sestonic C:P ratios, phytoplankton biomass, and hypolimnetic oxygen depletion rates in Lake Hallwil, a lake whose recovery from eutrophic conditions has been documented in 35 years of historic water-monitoring data. This study also interpreted long-term (C:P)epi ratios from reoligotrophication occurring in four other lakes. Lake Hallwil exhibited three distinct phases. (i) The (C:P)epi ratio remained low when TP concentrations did not limit production. (ii) (C:P)epi increased steadily when phytoplankton began optimizing the declining P and biomass remained stable. (iii) Below a critical TP threshold of ∼15 to ∼20 mg P m−3, (C:P)epi remained high and the biomass eventually declined. This analysis showed that the (C:P)epi ratio indicates the reduction of productivity prior to classic indicators such as deep-water oxygen depletion.

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Müller_C_P_Lake_Hallwil_EST_2010_20210511.pdf

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