Phosphorus recycling in deeply oxygenated sediments in Lake Superior controlled by organic matter mineralization

Jiying Li, Yishu Zhang, Sergei Katsev

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

33 Scopus citations

Abstract

Remobilization of phosphorus from aquatic sediments has been extensively investigated in systems prone to anoxia, while studies in well-oxygenated systems have been rare. The recycling efficiency of P in the offshore sediments in the Great Lakes, in particular, is still poorly known. We investigated phosphorus cycling at 13 locations (26–318 m water depth) in oligotrophic Lake Superior where oxygen penetrates into sediments by 2–12 cm. Vertical distributions of iron and phosphorus were measured in porewater and solid fractions, and transformation rates and vertical fluxes were calculated. Whereas a significant fraction of P is bound to ferric Fe in surface sediments, P effluxes into the water column (2.5–7.0 μmol m−2 d−1) are only weakly affected by iron reduction, because Fe : P ratios in surface sediment are high (∼ 40–80 mol : mol), and P sorption capacity is far from its limit. In contrast to organic rich systems where P effluxes are sensitive to redox conditions, phosphate effluxes in organic-poor well-oxygenated Lake Superior are controlled by the rates of organic phosphorus mineralization, similar to marine sediments. The efficiency of P recycling in Lake Superior sediments, however, is substantially lower than in marine sediments due to different P biogeochemistry. Only ∼ 12% of deposited P is returned to the water column. While burial into sediments is the dominant sink for P in the lake, sediments still contribute up to 40% of total water column P inputs. Similar behavior should be expected in other well-oxygenated freshwater systems, such as other large oligotrophic lakes.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Pages (from-to)1372-1385
Number of pages14
JournalLimnology and Oceanography
Volume63
Issue number3
DOIs
StatePublished - May 2018

Bibliographical note

Funding Information:
We thank Sean Crowe, Matthew Kistner, and David Miklesh for help with sample acquisition and processing, Jay Austin for sharing his National Science Foundation (NSF)-funded cruise opportunities in June and October 2009, Elizabeth Minor, Stephanie Guildford, and Josef Werne for sharing their laboratory facilities. We gratefully acknowledge the help of Captain Mike King and the crew of the R/V Blue Heron, marine technician Jason Agnich, and laboratory technician Sarah Grosshuesch. The work has been supported by the NSF Ocean Sciences (OCE) grant 0961720, the University of Minnesota Duluth start-up funds to SK, the Water Resources Science Block Grant, and University of Minnesota Duluth Physics Department summer fellowships to JL, and Undergraduate Research Opportunities Program to YZ.

Publisher Copyright:
© 2018 Association for the Sciences of Limnology and Oceanography

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