| Literature DB >> 22915669 |
Abstract
The management of eutrophication has been impeded by reliance on short-term experimental additions of nutrients to bottles and mesocosms. These measures of proximate nutrient limitation fail to account for the gradual changes in biogeochemical nutrient cycles and nutrient fluxes from sediments, and succession of communities that are important components of whole-ecosystem responses. Erroneous assumptions about ecosystem processes and lack of accounting for hysteresis during lake recovery have further confused management of eutrophication. I conclude that long-term, whole-ecosystem experiments and case histories of lake recovery provide the only reliable evidence for policies to reduce eutrophication. The only method that has had proven success in reducing the eutrophication of lakes is reducing input ofEntities:
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Year: 2012 PMID: 22915669 PMCID: PMC3479793 DOI: 10.1098/rspb.2012.1032
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Proc Biol Sci ISSN: 0962-8452 Impact factor: 5.349
Lakes that recovered from eutrophication following the control of phosphorus inputs (partial list).
| Lake Erie | Lake Ontario |
| Lake Geneva, Switzerland | Lake Lucerne, Switzerland |
| Lake Zurich, Switzerland | Lake Constance, Switzerland |
| Lago Maggiore, Italy | Lake Norrviken, Sweden |
| Lake Malaren, Sweden | Lake Hjalmaren, Sweden |
| Lake Vattern, Sweden | Lake Vanern, Sweden |
| Gravenhurst Bay, Ontario | Little Otter Lake, Ontario |
| Meretta Lake, Canada Lake Washington, | Kootenay Lake, British Columbia |
| Washington | Moses Lake, Washington |
| ELA lakes—226 NE, 303, 304, 261 | Lake Balaton, Hungary |
| Stockholm Archipelago (brackish water) |
Figure 1.(a) Total nitrogen (TN), (b) nitrate, (c) total phosphorus (TP) and (d) chlorophyll a in Lake 261 of ELA, before, during and after experimental fertilization with phosphorus, designated by the shaded area. Values are means for the epilimnion in the ice-free season. Note the successive increases in TN and chlorophyll a, despite the fact that only phosphorus was added to the lake.
Figure 2.The same parameters as in figure 1, for Lake 302 N (solid line, black circles), to which nitric acid was added, and Lake 302 S (dotted line, white circles), which received sulphuric acid. Neither basin received phosphorus. The period of addition is designated by shading (302 N) and two vertical lines (302 S). Note the lack of discernible response of chlorophyll a to nitrogen input.
Figure 3.The same parameters as in figure 1, for Lake 303, fertilized with nitrogen and phosphorus at a ratio of 15 : 1 (weight), as designated by the shaded area. Note the rapid increase in chlorophyll a, followed by a decrease in proportion to the decline in phosphorus, while excess nitrogen accumulates as nitrate. The arrow designates a forest fire in the catchment, which burned most of the vegetation and organic soil.
Figure 4.The same parameters as in figure 1, for Lake 304. The lake was fertilized with phosphorus, ammonium and sucrose in 1971–1972, ammonium and sucrose but no phosphorus in 1973–1974, then phosphorus and nitrate in 1975–1976. Note that the chlorophyll a increases rapidly when phosphorus is added, and decreases rapidly when it is not, whether or not nitrogen is added. The arrow designates a forest fire that burned most of the catchment.