Litcius/Paper detail

Environmental factors and thresholds for nitrogen fixation by phytoplankton in tropical reservoirs

Fellipe Henrique Martins Moutinho, Gabriela Albino Marafão, Maria do Carmo Calijuri, Marcelo Zacharias Moreira, Amy Marcarelli, Daví Gasparini Fernandes Cunha

2020International Review of Hydrobiology15 citationsDOI

Abstract

Abstract In theory, the phytoplankton community of freshwater ecosystems with low concentrations of dissolved inorganic nitrogen (DIN) can obtain this element by atmospheric nitrogen (N 2 ) fixation. This process could explain the dominance of cyanobacteria in tropical reservoirs, yet is rarely quantified in these systems. Assessing the factors related to N 2 fixation can assist in the management of cyanobacterial blooms. Our study characterized environmental factors related to N 2 fixation in Brazilian tropical reservoirs with contrasting trophic states, and defined quantitative thresholds for water chemistry and physical characteristics that stimulated N 2 fixation. We used field assays with 15 N for estimating N 2 fixation rates by phytoplankton. The highest rates normalized by chlorophyll‐ a (maximum of 143 × 10 −4 μg‐N μg‐Chl‐ a −1 h −1 ) coincided with eutrophic conditions and presence of diazotrophs. Receiver operating characteristic (ROC) analysis provided significant thresholds for water temperature (≥22°C), soluble reactive phosphorus (SRP) (≥3.0 μg‐P L −1 ), total phosphorus (TP) (≥20.5 μg‐P L −1 ), DIN:SRP (≤487) and DIN:TP (≤82) molar ratios, chlorophyll‐ a (≥12 μg L −1 ), and total suspended solids (≥4 mg L −1 ). Censored regressions confirmed that temperature, chlorophyll‐ a , and phosphorus were important predictors of N 2 fixation rates. In general, the N 2 fixation rates determined in this study were lower than those found for temperate reservoirs. However, the temperature threshold of 22°C or above, identified in our analysis, suggests that phytoplankton have the potential to fix N 2 throughout the year in tropical reservoirs. Our results suggested that phosphorus is the main nutrient controlling the rates of N 2 fixation when N 2 ‐fixing cyanobacteria were present. Phosphorus abatement is, thus, crucial for managing the trophic state and controlling N 2 ‐fixing cyanobacteria in these ecosystems.

Topics & Concepts

EutrophicationPhytoplanktonNitrogen fixationCyanobacteriaChlorophyll aDominance (genetics)Environmental chemistryTemperate climatePhosphorusChlorophyllNitrogenBiologyEnvironmental scienceEcologyNutrientBotanyChemistryBiochemistryOrganic chemistryGeneGeneticsBacteriaAquatic Ecosystems and Phytoplankton DynamicsMarine and coastal ecosystemsWater Quality and Pollution Assessment