ABSTRACT FROM NSF AWARDS: OCE- 0352291 / OCE- 0352274 / OCE 0352208
Collaborative Research: The Nitrifying of Lake Superior and Its Intersections with the P and Fe Cycles
The concentration of nitrate in Lake Superior waters has increased steadily during the past century by six-fold from ca. 5 to ca. 30 umol L-1. Today, nitrate remains in excess of biotic demand at the end of the growing season. Though the increase in nitrogen concentration is not surprising, the magnitude and rate of increase in Lake Superior are, considering the long, fifty-year N turnover rate of the lake, and the absence of significant local sources of N to the mainly forested watershed.
To elucidate the causes of this impressive nitrate build up, researchers from the University of Minnesota, Bowling Green State University, and Rutgers University will undertake studies of the Lake Superior nitrogen cycle, combined with studies of limiting nutrients and the responses of plankton communities to differing nutrient supply regimes. Nitrification and denitrification rates, previously assumed to be zero, will be measured with stable isotope tracers and with other methods. Sources and transformations of the lakes nitrate will be traced using natural abundances of stable isotopes of nitrogen and oxygen in the lake, in streams and rivers, and in atmospheric sources. In addition to testing the limitation on nitrate uptake, the team of scientists will also explore the N cycle and its intersection with the P and Fe cycles in this large lake. Shortages of P, along with cold and dark physical conditions, are likely important factors in understanding lack of ecosystem assimilation of added nitrate. Iron too may play an important role because of its critical role in nitrate utilization by plankton. Indeed, it may be that absence of iron limits the ability of the plankton to utilize nitrate such that the plankton are N deficient even in the presence of nitrate surplus. In addition to developing a new water column nitrogen model and data sets for several geochemically distinct pools of dissolved P and Fe (with both spatial and temporal coverage of large portions of the lake) this research will also yield a dramatically improved knowledge of the nitrogen cycle in the worlds' largest lake.
PUBLICATIONS PRODUCED AS A RESULT OF THIS RESEARCH
Finlay, J.C., R.W. Sterner, & S. Kumar.. "Isotopic evidence for in-lake production of accumulating nitrate in Lake Superior.," Ecological Applications., v.17, 2007, p. 2.
Sterner, R. W., E. Anagnostou, S. Brovold, G. S. Bullerjahn, J. C. Finlay, S. Kumar, R. M. L. McKay, and R. M. Sherrell.. "Increasing Stoichiometric Imbalance in Earth?s Largest Lake.," Geophysical Research Letters, v.34, 2007.
Ivanikova, N. V., R. M. L. McKay, G. S. Bullerjahn, and R. W. Sterner. 2007. Nitrate utilization in Lake Superior is impaired by low nutrient (P, Fe) availability and seasonal light limitation - a cyanobacterial bioreporter study. Journal of Phycology 43:475-484.
Kumar, S., J. C. Finlay, and R. W. Sterner. 2010. Isotopic composition of nitrogen in suspended particular matter of Lake Superior: implications for nutrient cycling and organic matter transformation. Biogeochemistry 103:1-14.
Kumar, S., R. W. Sterner, B. J. Finlay, and S. Brovold. 2007. Spatial and temporal variation of ammonium in Lake Superior. Journal of Great Lakes Research 33:581-591.
Kumar, S., R. W. Sterner, and J. Finlay. 2008. Nitrogen and carbon uptake dynamics in Lake Superior. Journal of Geophysical Research - Biogeosciences 113:G04003.
Sterner, R. W., T. Andersen, J. J. Elser, D. O. Hessen, J. M. Hood, E. McCauley, and J. Urabe. 2008. Scale-dependent carbon:nitrogen:phosphorus seston stoichiometry in marine and freshwaters. Limnology and Oceanography 53:1169-1180.
Dataset | Latest Version Date | Current State |
---|---|---|
CTD profiles from the Lake Superior collected during various R/V Blue Heron cruises between 2004-2006 (NILS project) | 2016-08-22 | Final no updates expected |
Standard station locations for repeat sampling in the Laurentian Great Lakes (LGL) - Superior, Huron, Erie from 2004 tp 2013 (SINC project, IRONMAN project, NILSS project, CARGO project) | 2012-08-03 | Final with updates expected |
Principal Investigator: Dr Robert W. Sterner
University of Minnesota Twin Cities (UMTC)
Co-Principal Investigator: George S. Bullerjahn
Bowling Green State University (BGSU)
Co-Principal Investigator: Robert Michael McKay
Bowling Green State University (BGSU)
Co-Principal Investigator: Robert M. Sherrell
Rutgers University
Contact: Dr Robert W. Sterner
University of Minnesota Twin Cities (UMTC)
Technician: Ms Sandra Brovold
University of Minnesota Twin Cities (UMTC)
BCO-DMO Data Manager: Stephen R. Gegg
Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution (WHOI BCO-DMO)
Laurentian Great Lakes Ecosystem Studies [Laurentian Great Lakes Ecosystem Studies]