Title: LAKE ECOLOGY
1LAKE ECOLOGY
- Unit 1 Module 2/3 Part 5 - Major Ions and
Nutrients January 2004
2Modules 2/3 overview
- Goal Provide a practical introduction to
limnology - Time required Two weeks of lecture (6 lectures)
and 2 laboratories - Extensions Additional material could be used to
expand to 3 weeks. We realize that there are far
more slides than can possibly be used in two
weeks and some topics are covered in more depth
than others. Teachers are expected to view them
all and use what best suits their purposes.
3Modules 2/3 outline
- Introduction
- Major groups of organisms metabolism
- Basins and morphometry
- Spatial and temporal variability basic physical
and chemical patchiness (habitats) - Major ions and nutrients
- Management eutrophication and water quality
45. Water chemistry Gases, major ions nutrients
55. Water chemistry Gases, major ions
nutrients
- Gases
- Oxygen (O2)
- Carbon dioxide (CO2)
- Nitrogen (N2)
- Hydrogen sulfide (H2S)
- Major ions (anions and cations)
- Nutrients (phosphorus and nitrogen)
6Water chemistry gases
- What are the ecologically most important gases ?
- O2
- CO2
- N2
- H2S
-
-
7Gas solubility
- The maximum amount of gas that can be dissolved
in water (100 saturation) is determined by
temperature, dissolved ion concentration, and
elevation - solubility decreases with temperature
- warm beer goes flat
- solubility decreases with higher dissolved ion
content (TDS, EC25, salinity) - DO saturation is lower in saltwater than
freshwater - (for the same temperature, solids drive out
gases)
8Water chemistry O2
- 21 of air
- Very soluble (DO)
- Highly reactive and concentration is dynamic
- Involved in metabolic energy transfers (PPr Rn)
- Major regulator of metabolism (oxic-anoxic)
- Aerobes (fish) vs anaerobes (no-fish, no zoops)
- Types of fish
- Salmonids high DO (also coldwater because of
DO) - Sunfish, carp, catfish low DO (also warmwater)
9O2 variability
- Diel (24 hr) variation due to ____________?
- Seasonal variation due to _____________ ?
10Major sources of O2
- Sources
- Photosynthesis (phytoplankton, periphyton,
macrophytes) - Air from wind mixing
- Inflows
- tributaries may have higher or lower DO
- groundwater may have higher or lower DO
- Diffusion (epilimnion to hypolimnion and vice
versa)
11Major sinks of O2
- Sinks
- Respiration
- bacteria, plants, animals water and sediments
- Diffusion to sediment respiration
- Outflow (tributary or groundwater)
12Gases wind mixing from storms
- Oxygen from a storm How many mixing events
can you find for Halsteds Bay in Lake Minnetonka,
MN in this 1 year record?
13Gases seasonal wind mixing
- Oxygen varies seasonally and the entire water
column lake may be fully saturated at certain
times. How often did this happen in Ice Lake, MN
in this 5 year record?
14O2 Human significance
- Not a direct threat to humans
- Directly affects fish physiology and habitat
- Indirectly affects fish and other organisms via
toxicants associated with anoxia - H2S
- NH4 (converts to NH4OH and NH3 above pH 9)
- Indirectly affects domestic water supply
- H2S (taste and odor)
- Solubilizes Fe (staining)
- Indirectly affects reservoir turbines
- Via H2S corrosion and pitting (even stainless
steel) - Via regulation of P-release from sediments
(mediated via Fe(OH)3 adsorption)
15Gases N2
- 78 of air
- Concentrations in water usually saturated
because it is nearly inert - Supersaturation (gt100 ) can occur in reservoir
tailwaters from high turbulence - May be toxic to fish (they get the bends)
- N2 -fixing bacteria and cyanobacteria
(blue-green algae) convert it to bio-available
NH4 - Denitrifying heterotrophic bacteria convert NO3-
to N2 and/or N2O under anoxic conditions
16Gases CO2
- Only about 0.035 of air ( 350 ppm)
- Concentration in H2O higher than expected based
on low atmospheric partial pressure because of
its high solubility
Gas (at 10oC) Concentration _at_ 1 atm (mg/L) Concentration _at_ normal pressure (mg/L)
N2 23.3 18.2
O2 55.0 11.3
CO2 2319 0.81
How long does your soda pop fizz after shaking it?
17CO2 reactions in water
- lt1 is hydrated to form carbonic acid
- CO2 H2O H2CO3
- Some of the carbonic acid dissociates into
bicarbonate and hydrogen ions which lowers the
pH - H2CO3 HCO-3 H
- As the pH rises, bicarbonate increases to 100
at a pH of 8.3. Above this, it declines by
dissociating into carbonate - HCO-3 CO3-2 H
18Inorganic - C equilibria
Note 100 CO2 for pHlt 4.5 100 bicarbonate
for pH 8 and 100 carbonate for pH gt 12
19Inorganic - C Major sources and sinks
- Sources
- Atmospheric CO2 (invasion)
- Respiration and other aerobic and anaerobic
decomposition pathways in the water and sediments - Groundwater from soil decomposition products
- Groundwater from volcanic seeps
- Sinks
- pH dependent conversions to bicarbonate and
carbonate - Precipitation of CaCO3 and MgCO3 at high pH
- Photosynthesis
20CO2 supersaturation killer Lake Nyos
- In 1986, a tremendous explosion of CO2 from Lake
Nyos, in Cameroon, West Africa, killed gt1700
people and livestock up to 25 km away. - Dissolved CO2 seeps from volcanic springs beneath
the lake and is trapped in deep water by
hydrostatic pressure. Nearby Lake Manoun is
similar in nature - Although unconfirmed, a landslide probably
triggered the gas release
Visit http//www.biology.lsa.umich.edu/gwk/resea
rch/nyos.html and http//perso.wanadoo.fr/mhalb/ny
os/index.htm for detailed information
21Soda pop chemistry
22CO2 and the inorganic carbon system
- Carbon dioxide diffuses from the atmosphere into
water bodies and can then be incorporated into
plant and animal tissue - It is also recycled within the water with some
being tied up in sediments and some ultimately
diffusing back into the atmosphere - Fixed carbon also enter the water as
allocthonous particulate and dissolved material
23CO2 and the inorganic carbon system - 2
- Alkalinity, acid neutralizing capacity (ANC),
acidity, carbon dioxide (CO2), pH, total
inorganic carbon, and hardness are all related
and are part of the inorganic carbon complex
24CO2 chemistry Alkalinity
- Alkalinity the ability of water to neutralize
acid a measure of buffering capacity or acid
neutralizing capacity (ANC) - Total Alkalinity (AlkT) HCO3- 2CO32-
OH- - H - Typically measured by titration with a strong
acid. The units are in mg CaCO3/L for reasons
relevant to drinking water treatment (details in
Module 9) - Can be used to estimate the DIC (dissolved
inorganic carbon) concentration if the OH- - Conversely, direct measurements of DIC by
infrared analysis or gas chromatography, together
with pH and the carbon fractionation schematic
can be used to estimate alkalinity ( see slide
notes)
25Alkalinity and water treatment
- Advanced wastewater treatment (domestic sewage)
- Phosphorus nutrient removal by adding lime
(Ca(OH) 2) or calcium carbonate (CaCO3) - As pH increases gt9, marl precipitates adsorbed
PO4-3 - Settle and filter the effluent to obtain 90-95
removal - Used for particle (TSS) removal also
- Drinking water treatment
- For TSS removal prior to disinfection
- Acid-rain mitigation to whole lakes
- Lime or limestone added as powdered slurry to
increase impacted lake pH - Also broadcast aerially to alkalize entire
watersheds
26CO2 chemistry Hardness
- Hardness - the total concentration of
multi-valent (i.e. gt2) cations - Ca2 Mg2 Fe 3 (when oxic) Mn2 (when
oxic) all other multivalent cations are
typically considered to be negligible - Sources-
- Minerals such as limestone (Ca and Mg) and gypsum
(Ca) - Water softeners and other water treatment
processes such as reverse osmosis and ion
exchange - Evaporation can increase hardness concentration
- Drinking water effects (no real health effects)
- Soap scums and water spots on glasses and
tableware - Deposits (scaling) can cause clogging problems in
pipes, boilers and cooling towers
27Water chemistry Major ions
Note plant nutrients such as nitrate, ammonium
and phosphate that can cause algae and weed
overgrowth usually occur at 10s or 100s of
parts-per-billion and along with other essential
micronutrients usually represent lt1 of the
actual amount of cations or anions present in the
water
28Major ion concentrations - freshwater
Anions mg/L Cations mg/L
HCO3- 58.4 Ca2 15.0
SO4-2 11.2 Mg2 4.1
Cl- 7.8 Na 6.3
SiO2 13 K 2.3
NO3- 1.0 Fe3 0.7
Total 91.4 anions 28.4 cations 120 mg/L (TDS) Total 91.4 anions 28.4 cations 120 mg/L (TDS) Total 91.4 anions 28.4 cations 120 mg/L (TDS) Total 91.4 anions 28.4 cations 120 mg/L (TDS)
29Nutrients phosphorus
- Essential for plant growth
- Usually the most limiting nutrient in lakes
- Derives from phosphatic rock abiotic, unlike
nitrogen - No gas phase, but can come from atmosphere as
fugitive dust - Adsorbs to soils
- Naturally immobile unless soil is eroded or
excess fertilizer is applied - Phosphorus moves with sediments
30Nutrients phosphorus
- Not toxic
- Algae have physical adaptations to acquire
phosphorus - High affinity (low k)
- APA
- Storage
- Luxury uptake
- Single redox state
- Phosphorus cycle is closely linked to the iron
(Fe) cycle
31Phosphorus basic properties
- No redox or respiration reactions directly
involved (organisms are not generating energy
from P chemistry) - PO43 highly adsorptive to cationic sites (Al3,
Fe3, Ca2) - Concentration strongly affected by iron redox
reactions - Ferric (3) insoluble floc
- Ferrous (2) soluble, unless it reacts with
sulfide, causing FeS to precipitate
32Phosphorus levels in the environment
- Major factors affecting phosphorus levels,
cycling, and impacts on water quality include - Soil properties
- Land use and disturbance
- Transport associated with runoff
33Where does phosphorus come from?
34Phosphorus external sources
- Nonpoint sources
- Watershed discharge from tributaries
- Atmospheric deposition
- Point sources
- Wastewater
- Industrial discharges
35Phosphorus nonpoint sources
- Watershed discharges from tributaries
- Strongly tied to erosion (land use management)
- Stormwater runoff (urban and rural)
- Agricultural and feedlot runoff
- On-site domestic sewage (failing septic systems)
- Sanitary sewer ex-filtration (leaky sewer lines)
- Atmospheric deposition
- Often an issue in more pristine areas
- Arises from dust, soil particles, waterfowl
36Phosphorus point sources
- Wastewater
- Municipal treated wastewater
- Combined sewer overflows (CSOs)
- Sanitary sewer overflows (SSOs)
- Industrial discharges
37Phosphorus internal sources
- Mixing from anoxic bottom waters with high
phosphate levels is closely tied to iron redox
reactions - O2 gt 1 mg/L Insoluble ferric (3) salts form
that precipitate and settle out, adsorbing PO4-3 - O2 lt 1 mg/L (anoxic) ferric ion reduced to
soluble ferrous ion (Fe2) allowing sediment
phosphate to diffuse up into the water - Wind mixing (storms and fall de-stratification)
can re-inject high P water to the surface,
causing algal blooms
38Phosphorus Lake budget
39Nutrients phosphorus cycle
- Major pools and sources of P in lakes
- Natural inputs are mostly associated with
particles - Wastewater is mostly dissolved phosphate
- P is rapidly removed from solution by
algal-bacterial uptake or by adsorption to
sediments
40Phosphorus cycling major sources
- Sewage
- Dissolved
- Tributaries and deposition
- Particulate
- Erosion
- Particulate
- Sediments
- Particulate and dissolved
41Phosphorus cycling internal recycling
- Rapid PO4-3 recycling
- Bacterial uptake
- Algal uptake
- Adsorption to particles
- Detritus mineralization
- Zooplankton excretion
- Fish excretion
42Phosphorus cycle major transformations
- The whole phosphorus cycle
43Nitrogen basic properties
- Nitrogen is relatively scarce in some watersheds
and therefore can be a limiting nutrient in
aquatic systems - Essential nutrient (e.g., amino acids, nucleic
acids, proteins, chlorophyll) - Differences from phosphorus
- Not geological in origin
- Unlike phosphorus, there are many oxidation
states
44Nitrogen biologically available forms
- N2 major source, but usable by only a few
species - Blue green algae (cyanobacteria) and anaerobic
bacteria - Nitrate (NO3-) and ammonium (NH4) major forms
of combined nitrogen for plant uptake - Also called dissolved inorganic nitrogen (DIN)
- Total nitrogen (TN) includes
- DIN dissolved organic nitrogen (DON)
particulate nitrogen
45Nitrogen general properties
- Essential for plant growth
- Not typically limiting but can be in
- Highly enriched lakes
- Pristine, unproductive lakes located in
watersheds with nitrogen-poor soils - Estuaries, open ocean
- Lots of input from the atmosphere
- Combustion NO2, fertilizer dust
46Nitrogen general properties
- Mobile in the form of nitrate (soluble), it
goes wherever water flows - Ammonium (NH4) adsorbs to soil particles
- Blue green algae can fix nitrogen (N2) from the
atmosphere - Nitrogen has many redox states and is involved in
many bacterial transformations
47Nitrogen sources
- Atmospheric deposition
- Wet and dry deposition (NO3- and NH4)
- Combustion gases (power plants, vehicle exhaust,
acid rain), dust, fertilizers - Streams and groundwater (mostly NO3-)
- Sewage and feedlots (NO3- and NH4)
- Agricultural runoff (NO3- and NH4)
- Regeneration from aquatic sediments and the
hypoliminion (NH4)
48Nitrogen - toxicity
- Methemoglobinemia blue baby syndrome
- gt 10 mg/L NO3--N or gt 1 mg/L NO2--N in well water
- Usually related to agricultural contamination of
groundwater - NO3- possible cause of stomach/colon cancer
- Un-ionized NH4 can be toxic to coldwater fish
- NH4OH and NH3 at high pH
- N2O and NOx contribute to smog, haze, ozone
layer depletion, acid rain
49Nitrogen many oxidation states
- Unlike P there are many oxidation states
- Organisms have evolved to make use of these
oxidation-reduction states for energy metabolism
and biosynthesis
-3 0 1 2 3 5
NH4 N2 N2O NO2 NO2- NO3-
50Nitrogen bacterial transformations
Organic N NH4-N Heterotrophic ammonification or mineralization. Associated with oxic or anoxic respiration.
NH4-N NO3- Involves oxygen (oxic). Autotrophic and chemosynthetic ("burn NH4-N to fix CO2).
NO3- N2 (gas) Anoxic process. Heterotrophic. ("burn" organic matter and respire NO3-, not O2).
N2 (gas) Organic N Some blue green algae are able to do this.
51Nutrients nitrogen cycle
Nutrients- The Nitrogen Cycle
- modified from Horne and Goldman. 1994. Limnology.
McGraw Hill.
52Chemical forms of nitrogen in aquatic systems
organism-N detrital-N dissolved organic-N
Fixed or available-N
Dissolved inorganic-N (DIN)
Nitrate major runoff fraction
Ammonium basic unit for biosynthesis
Nitrite usually transient
N2 largest reservoir but cannot be used by most
organisms
53Functionally in the lab using filters
Total-N particulate organic-N dissolved
organic-N particulate inorganic-N
dissolved inorganic-N TN PN DON DIN
- Dissolved inorganic-N Nitrate Nitrite-N
ammonium-N - DIN NO3-N NO2-N NH4-N
- Notes
- Nitratenitrite are usually measured together.
- Nitrite is usually negligible.
54Main N-cycle transformations
Assimilation (algae bacteria) Assimilation
Denitrification
Mineralization
Denitrification (anoxic bacteria)
N2 - Fixation - Soil bacteria - Cyanobacteria -
Industrial activity - Sulfur bacteria
55Whole lake N-budget
Tribs, GW, Precip DON, PON, NO3-, NH4
N2
Ammonia volatilization
N2-fixation
Assimilation
Outflow
Algae
NO3-
NH4
Denitrification
DIN PON DON
Mineralization
Mixing
Sedimentation
NO3-
oxic anoxic
Sedimentation
NO2-, N2O NO
Nitrification
NH4
Mineralization
diffusion
Burial
Burial
Surficial Sediments
Deep Sediments
56Nutrients summer vertical profiles
57Sulfide and iron summer vertical profiles
anoxia
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