Responses of lake phytoplankton communities to changing inorganic nitrogen supply forms
Gabriele Trommer, Monika Poxleitner, Herwig Stibor
Abstract
Abstract A shift has been predicted in future nitrogen emission scenarios from nitrous oxide to higher proportions of ammonium compounds. To investigate the interaction between increasing nitrogen load and varying nitrate:ammonium ratios (NO 3 − :NH 4 + ), we performed a mesocosm experiment in an oligotrophic lake in southern Germany. We fertilized mesocosms with both roughly natural and four times the natural nitrogen wet deposition amounts in molar NO 3 − :NH 4 + ratios of 4:1 and 1:4. We observed greater phytoplankton biomass in treatments with a relatively higher ammonium supply, but not in those with nitrate and total nitrogen load. Ammonium significantly increased the total chlorophyll a concentrations, and especially the growth of small nanophytoplankton species. The effects observed indicate that NH 4 + was taken up preferentially and that spring phytoplankton in oligotrophic lakes appear to be able to respond to variations in nitrogen forms (available NO 3 − :NH 4 + ratios) by adjusting their community composition. Such communal changes at the base of the food web may affect higher trophic levels. Therefore, the effects of varying available forms of nitrogen should also be considered in primarily phosphorus-limited aquatic systems.