Literature DB >> 30739365

Color, chlorophyll a, and suspended solids effects on Secchi depth in lakes: implications for trophic state assessment.

Patrick L Brezonik1, R William Bouchard2, Jacques C Finlay3, Claire G Griffin3, Leif G Olmanson4, Jesse P Anderson2, William A Arnold1, Raymond Hozalski1.   

Abstract

Secchi depth (SD), a primary metric to assess trophic state, is controlled in many lakes by algal densities, measured as chlorophyll-a (chl-a) concentration. Two other optically related water quality variables also directly affect SD: non-algal suspended solids (SSNA ) and colored dissolved organic matter (CDOM, expressed as the absorption coefficient at 440 nm, a440 ). Using a database of ~1,460 samples from ~625 inland lake basins in Minnesota and two other Upper Midwest states, Wisconsin and Michigan, we analyzed relationships among these variables, with special focus on CDOM levels that influence SD values and the Minnesota SD standards used to assess eutrophication impairment of lakes. Log-transformed chl-a, total suspended solids (TSS), and SD were strongly correlated with each other; log(a440 ) had major effects on log(SD) but was only weakly correlated with log(chl-a) and log(TSS). Multiple regression models for log(SD) and 1/SD based on the three driving variables (chl-a, SSNA , and CDOM) explained ~80% of the variance in SD in the whole data set, but substantial differences in the form of the best-fit relationships were found between major ecoregions. High chl-a concentrations (> 50 μg/L) and TSS (> 20 mg/L) rarely occurred in lakes with high CDOM (a440  > ~4 m-1 ), and all lakes with a440  > 8 m-1 had SD ≤ 2.0 m despite low chl-a values (<10 μg/L) in most lakes. Further statistical analyses revealed that CDOM has significant effects on SD at a440 values > ~ 4 m-1 . Thus, SD is not an accurate trophic state metric in moderately to highly colored lakes, and Minnesota's 2-m SD criterion should not be the sole metric to assess eutrophication impairment in warm/cool-water lakes of the Northern Lakes and Forest ecoregion. More generally, trophic state assessments using SD in regions with large landscape sources of CDOM need to account for effects of CDOM on SD.
© 2019 by the Ecological Society of America.

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Keywords:  Secchi depth; Upper Midwest; chlorophyll a; colored dissolved organic matter; dissolved colored organic matter; ecoregion; lakes; total suspended solids; trophic state

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Year:  2019        PMID: 30739365     DOI: 10.1002/eap.1871

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Ecol Appl        ISSN: 1051-0761            Impact factor:   4.657


  3 in total

1.  Iron influence on dissolved color in lakes of the Upper Great Lakes States.

Authors:  Patrick L Brezonik; Jacques C Finlay; Claire G Griffin; William A Arnold; Evelyn H Boardman; Noah Germolus; Raymond M Hozalski; Leif G Olmanson
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2019-02-13       Impact factor: 3.240

2.  High-light inhibition of two submerged macrophytes in a shallow water experiment.

Authors:  Jin-Rui Yuan; Zhong-Xi Bai; Shi-Yun Ye; Hui Liu; Yan-Hong Wang; Feng Li; Yong-Hong Xie; An-Guo Gao; Ai-Ping Wu
Journal:  AoB Plants       Date:  2022-03-04       Impact factor: 3.276

3.  Development of a Solar-Powered IoT-Based Instrument for Automatic Measurement of Water Clarity.

Authors:  Tuan Ngoc Pham; Anh Pham Huy Ho; Tuong Van Nguyen; Ha Minh Nguyen; Nhu Huynh Truong; Nguyen Duc Huynh; Tung Huy Nguyen; Le The Dung
Journal:  Sensors (Basel)       Date:  2020-04-06       Impact factor: 3.576

  3 in total

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