| Literature DB >> 18538826 |
Zhao Zhang1, Takehiko Fukushima, Peijun Shi, Fulu Tao, Yuichi Onda, Takashi Gomi, Shigeru Mizugaki, Yuko Asano, Ken'ichirou Kosugi, Shinya Hiramatsu, Hikaru Kitahara, Koichiro Kuraji, Tomomi Terajima, Kazuo Matsushige.
Abstract
A comprehensive investigation on all dissolved nitrogen and phosphorus components at both local and regional scales in the headwaters from forested watersheds is valuable to improve our understanding of the factors controlling water quality. Here, we investigated the baseflow concentrations of dissolved nitrogen and phosphorus components, N:P ratio, and their associations with region and vegetation type in forested headwaters in fives regions of Japan. We found that inorganic nitrogen and phosphorus were the dominant components in the 26 temperate forested streams, rather than organic forms. There were significant positive correlations between the concentrations of N and P components. Furthermore, the regional patterns of the concentrations of nitrate, dissolved inorganic P (DIP), and dissolved total N (DTN) and P (DTP) were similar. Our results suggest that the regional patterns of the concentrations of N and P components should be related to the regional atmospheric deposition of both N and P nutrients. We also found that the nitrate and DTN concentrations were higher in man-made evergreen conifer (EC) than those in the natural deciduous broadleaf (DB). In contrast, the DIP and DTP concentrations in EC were lower than those in DB. The uniformly higher N:P ratio in EC- than in DB-forested streams for each region suggest that EC-forested streams could be more affected by P-limited than DB-forested streams when N inputs from atmospheric sources increased.Entities:
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Year: 2008 PMID: 18538826 DOI: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2008.04.045
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Total Environ ISSN: 0048-9697 Impact factor: 7.963