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Journal ArticleDOI

Nutrient Limitation of Net Primary Production in Marine Ecosystems

Robert W. Howarth
- 01 Jan 1988 - 
- Vol. 19, Iss: 1, pp 89-110
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TLDR
There is a feeling among many limnologists and environmental engineers who study lakes that marine ecosystems also probably are phosphorus limited, and environmental management agencies often assume that phosphorus limitation in marine ecosystems is the rule.
Abstract
The question of nutrient limitation of primary production in estuaries and other marine ecosystems has engendered a great deal of debate. Although nitrogen is often named as the primary limiting nutrient in seawater (3, 17-19, 50, 52, 55, 61, 76, 80), this is by no means universally accepted. Many workers have argued that phosphorus is limiting (58, 71), that both nitrogen and phosphorus can simultaneously be limiting (9), or that primary production can switch seasonally from being nitrogen-limited to phosphorus-limited (6, 46). Others argue that nutrients are not limiting at all in many marine ecosystems, including highly oligotrophic waters (15). To some extent these disagreements result from poor communication due to different definitions of nutrient limitation. Considerable argument also occurs over the various methods and approaches used to estimate nutrient limitation. Limnologists in particular have tended to be critical of the methods often used to study nutrient limitation in marine ecosystems (23). Nutrient limitation in lakes has historically received more study than that in estuaries, and most mesotrophic and eutrophic north-temperate lakes are phosphorus limited (8, 62, 63, 66, 81). Thus, there is a feeling among many limnologists and environmental engineers who study lakes that marine ecosystems also probably are phosphorus limited. Lacking strong mechanistic arguments to explain why nutrient limitation might be different in estuaries than in lakes, environmental management agencies often assume that phosphorus limitation in marine ecosystems is the rule.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Consequences of nitrogen additions for soil losses from wet tropical forests

TL;DR: In this paper, the effects of first-time and long-term N additions on the pattern and regulation of hydrologic N losses from wet tropical forests located at the extreme ends of a soil age and fertility gradient in the Hawaiian Islands were evaluated.

Nutrient criteria technical guidance manual : estuarine and coastal marine waters

TL;DR: The nitrogen management consortium of local electric utilities, industries and agricultural interests, as well as local governments and regulatory agency representatives, has developed a Consortium Action Plan to address the target load reduction needed to hold the line at 1992-1994 levels as discussed by the authors.
Journal ArticleDOI

Phosphorus burial as a function of paleoproductivity and redox conditions in Arabian Sea sediments

TL;DR: In this article, the response of sedimentary phosphorus burial to changes in primary productivity and bottom water oxygen concentrations during the Late Quaternary is investigated, using two sediment cores from the Arabian Sea, one recovered from the continental slope and the other from the deep basin.
Journal ArticleDOI

Regional‐scale effects of eutrophication on ecosystem structure and services of seagrass beds

TL;DR: Using large-scale field surveys across 12 estuaries in two provinces in Atlantic Canada, this paper analyzed changes in phytoplankton and benthic macroalgal communities as well as the canopy structure of eelgrass beds and quantified their carbon and nitrogen storage.
Journal ArticleDOI

Directly Measured Denitrification Reveals Oyster Aquaculture and Restored Oyster Reefs Remove Nitrogen at Comparable High Rates

TL;DR: It is demonstrated that habitats associated with live oysters have higher net denitrification rates and that oyster reef restoration and oyster aquaculture may provide similar benefits to the ecosystem in terms of N removal, and gas fluxes may also be affected where three-dimensional structure is introduced via oyster shell cultch and this appears to be seasonally-dependent.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Particulate organic matter flux and planktonic new production in the deep ocean

TL;DR: The primary production in the oceans results from allochthonous nutrient inputs to the euphotic zone (new production) and from nutrient recycling in the surface waters (regenerated production) as discussed by the authors.
Journal ArticleDOI

Nitrogen, Phosphorus, and Eutrophication in the Coastal Marine Environment

TL;DR: Removal of phosphate from detergents is not likely to slow the eutrophication of coastal marine waters, and its replacement with nitrogen-containing nitrilotriacetic acid may worsen the situation.
Journal ArticleDOI

Nutrient limitation of phytoplankton in freshwater and marine environments: A review of recent evidence on the effects of enrichment1

TL;DR: It is concluded that the extent and severity of N limitation in the marine environment remain an open question, despite the fact that by the late seventies the evidence for P limitation had become so great that phosphorus control was recommended as the legislated basis for controlling eutrophication in North American and European inland waters.
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