Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Nitrogen transport through linked stream-lake systems measured with 15 N tracer Wayne Wurtsbaugh Koren Nydick Michelle Baker Bob Hall Stream-Lake Interaction.

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "Nitrogen transport through linked stream-lake systems measured with 15 N tracer Wayne Wurtsbaugh Koren Nydick Michelle Baker Bob Hall Stream-Lake Interaction."— Presentation transcript:

1 Nitrogen transport through linked stream-lake systems measured with 15 N tracer Wayne Wurtsbaugh Koren Nydick Michelle Baker Bob Hall Stream-Lake Interaction Project (SLI) Utah State University University of Wyoming

2 Stream-Lake Interaction (SLI) Program Question: How do complex patterns of lakes and stream influence ecosystem function? Boulder Chain Lakes Watershed, White Cloud Mountains, Idaho A B D C E ?

3 Boise Sawtooth Mountains, ID

4 Tracer Addition Experiments Bull Trout Watershed Sawtooth Mountains, Idaho Lake: 28 ha 16 m deep

5 Deep Chlorophyll Layers Chl a 21 Jun 2002 20 August 2003 °C

6 Tracer Addition Experiments Bull Trout Watershed Sawtooth Mountains, Idaho Drip 1800 m

7 Tracer Addition Experiments Bull Trout Watershed Sawtooth Mountains, Idaho Lake: 28 ha 16 m deep 0.2  M NO 3 Solution containing 70 g 15 N-NO 3 + 55 kg Br - added continuously for 14 d - June 2002 - Aug 2003 Drip 1800 m

8 Tracer Addition Experiments Bull Trout Watershed Sawtooth Mountains, Idaho Lake: 28 ha 16 m deep 0.2  M NO 3 Solution containing 70 g 15 N-NO 3 55 kg Br - added continuously for 14 d - June 2002 - Aug 2003 Streams 15 N Dissolved N Benthic (3) Seston export Drip 1800 m

9 Tracer Addition Experiments Bull Trout Watershed Sawtooth Mountains, Idaho Lake: 28 ha 16 m deep Drip 1800 m 2480 4300 m Solution containing 15 N-NO 3 and Br added continuously for 14 d - June 2002 - Aug 2003 Streams 15 N Dissolved N Benthic (3) Seston export Lake Dissolved Seston Epiphytes Epipelic (in progress) Sedimentation Zooplankton

10 Discharge & Residence times

11 2002 Inflow Outflow May Jun Jul Aug Sep NO 3 – N (  M) Inflow Outflow Spring Runoff Baseflow addition Biota N or N & P co-limited Stream

12 Stream Benthos & Seston Lake Epiphytes Dissolved 15 N Lake Seston, Zooplankton, Sediment Traps

13 Stream N15 budgets Spring Runoff (2002) Base Flow (2003) Retained Exported (32%) Retained Export to Lake (73%)

14 I know I’ll find that tracer in here somewhere…

15 Rhodamine Plunging Stream Inflows SUMMER

16 Excess 15 N (seston) Spring runoffBaseflow

17 Day 15-17 (48%) Seston Standing Stock Sed- imented Material Epiphytes Zooplankton Nitrate- 15 N = 0.03 % Seston Export Day 76-79 Sedimented Material Epi- phytes Zooplankton Seston Export Day 76-79 (62 %) Seston Nitrate- 15 N = undetectable 2002: Budget – 15 N in Lake

18 N-15 Pathways during Snowmelt Drip Seston Epiphytes Shallow plunging inflow = more N15 in upper layers of lake Sedimentation Seston Export Short hydraulic residence time: seston export = sedimentation NO 3 + little seston High discharge = connectivity to floodplain = high nitrate uptake by inflow wetland High discharge & low temps = little uptake in stream channel Warmer water temps, abundant filter- feeders, and efficient seston retention

19 Predicted N-15 Pathways during Base Flow NO 3 + more seston Low discharge = lack of connectivity to floodplain = little? nitrate uptake by inflow wetland Low discharge & warmer temps = somewhat more NO 3 uptake in stream channel Deep plunging inflow = more 15 N in deeper layers of lake Seston Epiphytes Sedimentation Seston Export Longer hydraulic residence time: seston export << sedimentation

20 NO 3 0.1% Benthos 2% Seston 13% Hyporheic* 28% Seston 27% Profundal Sedimentation 4% Littoral** Epiphytes Sedimentation 26% Inflow Lake Stream Outflow 2002 Ecosytem Budget Spring Runoff Day 18

21 HAVE YOU HUGGED A LIMNOLOGIST TODAY ? Reaching Out to Other Aquatic Environments

22 National Science Foundation (DEB 0132983) U.S. Forest Service Jim Haefner Joel Moore Agnes Chartier Matt Townsend Jessie Decker Amy Marcarelli Phil Brown Chris Craemer Julia Nielsen Lisa Jeffs Acknowledgements

23

24 Abstract ABSTRACT In mountainous regions, lakes and streams are often closely linked in complex spatial patterns. These spatial patterns interact to modify nutrient transport in both lakes and streams, in turn influencing ecosystem function. Despite these coupled interactions, streams and lakes are usually studied in isolation. We used 15N-nitrate additions to a nitrogen-limited subalpine system to help understand coupling and functioning within a stream-lake-stream triplet. During spring runoff, the stream channel retained little tracer, but 30% was retained in the flood plain. The lake incorporated all of the nitrate tracer that reached it and exported only organic nitrogen. During a late summer tracer addition, significantly 3X more tracer was retained in the coupled stream-floodplain system. The lake again retained the remaining dissolved tracer, and over 60% was held in the deep chlorophyll layer and periphyton, thus reducing the flushing of nitrogen to the lake outflow. The timing of nutrient flux through the system, as well as the configuration of streams and lakes in a watershed, will thus have marked influence on watershed retention of nitrogen.

25 15 N : Br - ratios


Download ppt "Nitrogen transport through linked stream-lake systems measured with 15 N tracer Wayne Wurtsbaugh Koren Nydick Michelle Baker Bob Hall Stream-Lake Interaction."

Similar presentations


Ads by Google