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Journal ArticleDOI

Macroalgae Mediation of Dissolved Organic Nitrogen Fluxes in a Temperate Coastal Lagoon

TLDR
In this paper, the role of macroalgae in mediating water column concentrations and sediment-water column fluxes of DON across a nutrient gradient in Hog Island Bay, a shallow macroalgal-dominated back-barrier lagoon located on the Virginia Coast was investigated.
Abstract
The activity of the benthos, including benthic plants, is important in driving the overall system dynamics in shallow lagoons, due to the high ratio of sediment surface area relative to water volume. In Hog Island Bay, benthic macroalgae appear to be a key regulator of DON dynamics, both while alive and following senescence. We investigated the role of macroalgae in mediating water column concentrations and sediment-water column fluxes of DON across a nutrient gradient in Hog Island Bay, a shallow macroalgal-dominated back-barrier lagoon located on the Virginia Coast. Sediment-water column exchanges of DON, urea and DIN were measured in sediment cores with and without macroalgae (Ulva lactuca) at three subtidal sites from the mainland to the barrier islands in the fall of 1997 and the spring and summer of 1998. The summer sampling dates bracketed a large macroalgal bloom in the mid-lagoon. Dissolved organic nitrogen was an important component (52-98%) of the total dissolved nitrogen pool in Hog Island Bay waters and made up the majority of the sediment N flux to the water column. Macroalgae impacted benthic-pelagic coupling by preventing diffusion of DIN from the water column to the sediments and by intercepting urea fluxes from the sediment to the water column. Closest to the mainland and closest to the barrier islands, at sites with low macroalgal biomass, sediment-water column fluxes of DIN and urea-free DON were negligible or directed into the sediments. Fluxes of urea from the sediment to the water column were significant at both sites, and may play an important role in satisfying macroalgal N demand, especially at the low N island site. Overall, urea was 32% of the mean DON flux from the sediments to the water column. Fluxes of urea-free DON were highest in the mid-lagoon, where macroalgal biomass was highest. The highest overall flux rates of DON (>38 mmol m−2 d−1) and DIN (>33 mmol m−2 d−1) were measured following an isolated crash of a large macroalgal mat. These release rates were not sustained for long, however, and we estimated that the majority of the N contained in the decomposing macroalgal tissues disappeared in <2 weeks. In addition to release of organic N following senescence, macroalgae ‘ leak ’ DON into the water column during active growth; release of DON increased by 250% in cores incubated with U. lactuca relative to cores with sediment only. These algae function as a conduit whereby water-column DIN and sediment urea are taken up and released to the water column as DON over relatively short (hours) time scales. This conversion of bioavailable dissolved N to PON and DON by macroalgae is likely to be important to overall system metabolism and to the retention of N within the lagoon.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Eutrophication in shallow coastal bays and lagoons: the role of plants in the coastal filter

TL;DR: In this article, the authors focus on one type of biotic feedback that influences eu- trophication patterns in coastal bays, and discuss the 2 aspects of plant-mediated nutrient cycling as eutrophica- tion induces a shift in primary producer dominance.
Journal ArticleDOI

Seagrass recovery in the Delmarva Coastal Bays, USA

TL;DR: In this paper, a large-scale Zostera marina restoration effort in the coastal bays of the Delmarva Peninsula, USA, utilizing seeds, while simultaneously monitoring water quality using spatially and temporally intensive water quality mapping techniques.
Journal ArticleDOI

Evidence of sewage-driven eutrophication and harmful algal blooms in Florida's Indian River Lagoon

TL;DR: The high degree of sewage N contamination of the IRL, combined with recent HABs, including toxic ecotypes of the red macroalga Gracilaria tikvahiae McLachlan, seagrass loss, and wildlife mortality, indicates a critical need for improved sewage collection and treatment, including nutrient removal.
Journal ArticleDOI

Benthic algae control sediment—water column fluxes of organic and inorganic nitrogen compounds in a temperate lagoon

TL;DR: In this article, the authors demonstrate that both microalgae and macroalgae are important in controlling dissolved inorganic as well as organic nitrogen (DIN and DON) fluxes between the sediments and the water column.
References
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BookDOI

Methods of seawater analysis

TL;DR: The Automatic Determination of Dissolved Organic Carbon (DOC) by Wet Chemical Oxidation is described in this paper, along with the results of HPLC analysis of photosynthetic pigments.
Journal ArticleDOI

Macroalgal blooms in shallow estuaries: Controls and ecophysiological and ecosystem consequences

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors review features of macroalgal blooms pointed out in recent literature and summarize work done in the Waquoit Bay Land Margin Ecosystems Research project which suggests that nutrient loads, water residence times, presence of fringing salt marshes, and grazing affect macroalgae blooms.
Journal ArticleDOI

Submerged aquatic vegetation in relation to different nutrient regimes

TL;DR: Submerged vegetation respond to increased nutrient loading through a shift from slow-growing seagrasses and large Macroalgae to fast-growing macroalgae, and the ultimate dominance of phytoplankton at high nutrient loadings, which reflects a change from nutrient to light limitation along the eutrophication gradient.
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