Literature DB >> 30711592

Chironomid larvae enhance phosphorus burial in lake sediments: Insights from long-term and short-term experiments.

Michael Hupfer1, Sylvia Jordan2, Christiane Herzog2, Christian Ebeling2, Robert Ladwig3, Matthias Rothe2, Jörg Lewandowski4.   

Abstract

Tube-dwelling macrozoobenthos can affect lake ecosystems in myriad ways, including changes in nutrient fluxes across the sediment-water interface. The pumping activity of chironomid larvae reinforces the transport of solutes between sediment and water. The transport of oxygen into the area surrounding the burrows generates oxidized compounds such as iron(oxy)hydroxides, which results in an additional phosphorus (P) sorption capacity similar to that of oxidized sediment surfaces. In the present study, the effect of the oxidized burrow walls of Chironomus plumosus on P binding capacity and P binding forms was tested in the laboratory using sediments with differing iron contents and varying numbers of chironomid larvae. In an additional long-term experiment, lake sediment naturally rich in iron was incubated under oxic conditions for 165 days, followed by a 3.5-year anoxic period. These experiments showed that: (1) Under oxic conditions the cumulative P uptake by sediments was dependent on larval densities. (2) The P that accumulated both at the sediment-water interface and in the oxidized burrow walls was mainly present as reductive soluble P (iron-bound P). Surprisingly, the amount of P released during the anoxic period in the long-term experiment was independent of the amount of P previously taken up during the oxic period since a portion of P was permanently retained in the sediment. The increase in alkaline soluble metal-bound P (NaOH-SRP) in formerly colonized sediments is a strong indication that the excessive P fixation by reductive soluble iron triggers the subsequent formation of stable iron phosphate minerals such as vivianite. Our study shows that P fixation that is induced by chironomid larvae is not always a completely reversible phenomenon, even after the emergence of the larvae and the re-establishment of anoxic conditions in the sediment.
Copyright © 2019 The Authors. Published by Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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Keywords:  Chironomids; Iron; Lake internal phosphorus cycling; Phosphorus binding forms; Phosphorus diagenesis; Tube-dwelling macrozoobenthos

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Year:  2019        PMID: 30711592     DOI: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2019.01.274

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Sci Total Environ        ISSN: 0048-9697            Impact factor:   7.963


  1 in total

1.  Animal bioturbation preserved in Pleistocene magadiite at Lake Magadi, Kenya Rift Valley, and its implications for the depositional environment of bedded magadiite.

Authors:  Luis A Buatois; Robin W Renaut; Richard Bernhart Owen; Anna K Behrensmeyer; Jennifer J Scott
Journal:  Sci Rep       Date:  2020-04-22       Impact factor: 4.379

  1 in total

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