Delving deeper: Metabolic processes in the metalimnion of stratified lakes

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Delving deeper: Metabolic processes in the metalimnion of stratified lakes. / Giling, Darren P.; Staehr, Peter A.; Grossart, Hans Peter et al.
In: Limnology and Oceanography, Vol. 62, No. 3, 01.05.2017, p. 1288-1306.

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

HarvardHarvard

Giling, DP, Staehr, PA, Grossart, HP, Andersen, MR, Boehrer, B, Escot, C, Evrendilek, F, Gomez-Gener, L, Honti, M, Jones, ID, Karakaya, N, Laas, A, Moreno-Ostos, E, Rinke, K, Scharfenberger, U, Schmidt, SR, Weber, M, Woolway, RI, Zwart, JA & Obrador, B 2017, 'Delving deeper: Metabolic processes in the metalimnion of stratified lakes', Limnology and Oceanography, vol. 62, no. 3, pp. 1288-1306. https://doi.org/10.1002/lno.10504

APA

Giling, D. P., Staehr, P. A., Grossart, H. P., Andersen, M. R., Boehrer, B., Escot, C., Evrendilek, F., Gomez-Gener, L., Honti, M., Jones, I. D., Karakaya, N., Laas, A., Moreno-Ostos, E., Rinke, K., Scharfenberger, U., Schmidt, S. R., Weber, M., Woolway, R. I., Zwart, J. A., & Obrador, B. (2017). Delving deeper: Metabolic processes in the metalimnion of stratified lakes. Limnology and Oceanography, 62(3), 1288-1306. https://doi.org/10.1002/lno.10504

CBE

Giling DP, Staehr PA, Grossart HP, Andersen MR, Boehrer B, Escot C, Evrendilek F, Gomez-Gener L, Honti M, Jones ID, et al. 2017. Delving deeper: Metabolic processes in the metalimnion of stratified lakes. Limnology and Oceanography. 62(3):1288-1306. https://doi.org/10.1002/lno.10504

MLA

Giling, Darren P. et al. "Delving deeper: Metabolic processes in the metalimnion of stratified lakes". Limnology and Oceanography. 2017, 62(3). 1288-1306. https://doi.org/10.1002/lno.10504

VancouverVancouver

Giling DP, Staehr PA, Grossart HP, Andersen MR, Boehrer B, Escot C et al. Delving deeper: Metabolic processes in the metalimnion of stratified lakes. Limnology and Oceanography. 2017 May 1;62(3):1288-1306. Epub 2017 Mar 9. doi: 10.1002/lno.10504

Author

Giling, Darren P. ; Staehr, Peter A. ; Grossart, Hans Peter et al. / Delving deeper: Metabolic processes in the metalimnion of stratified lakes. In: Limnology and Oceanography. 2017 ; Vol. 62, No. 3. pp. 1288-1306.

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Delving deeper: Metabolic processes in the metalimnion of stratified lakes

AU - Giling, Darren P.

AU - Staehr, Peter A.

AU - Grossart, Hans Peter

AU - Andersen, Mikkel Rene

AU - Boehrer, Bertram

AU - Escot, Carmelo

AU - Evrendilek, Fatih

AU - Gomez-Gener, Lluis

AU - Honti, Mark

AU - Jones, Ian D.

AU - Karakaya, Nusret

AU - Laas, Alo

AU - Moreno-Ostos, Enrique

AU - Rinke, Karsten

AU - Scharfenberger, Ulrike

AU - Schmidt, Silke R.

AU - Weber, Michael

AU - Woolway, R. Iestyn

AU - Zwart, Jacob A.

AU - Obrador, Biel

PY - 2017/5/1

Y1 - 2017/5/1

N2 - Many lakes exhibit seasonal stratification, during which they develop strong thermal and chemical gradients. An expansion of depth-integrated monitoring programs has provided insight into the importance of organic carbon processing that occurs below the upper mixed layer. However, the chemical and physical drivers of metabolism and metabolic coupling remain unresolved, especially in the metalimnion. In this depth zone, sharp gradients in key resources such as light and temperature co-occur with dynamic physical conditions that influence metabolic processes directly and simultaneously hamper the accurate tracing of biological activity. We evaluated the drivers of metalimnetic metabolism and its associated uncertainty across 10 stratified lakes in Europe and North America. We hypothesized that the metalimnion would contribute highly to whole-lake functioning in clear oligotrophic lakes, and that metabolic rates would be highly variable in unstable polymictic lakes. Depth-integrated rates of gross primary production (GPP) and ecosystem respiration (ER) were modelled from diel dissolved oxygen curves using a Bayesian approach. Metabolic estimates were more uncertain below the epilimnion, but uncertainty was not consistently related to lake morphology or mixing regime. Metalimnetic rates exhibited high day-to-day variability in all trophic states, with the metalimnetic contribution to daily whole-lake GPP and ER ranging from 0% to 87% and < 1% to 92%, respectively. Nonetheless, the metalimnion of low-nutrient lakes contributed strongly to whole-lake metabolism on average, driven by a collinear combination of highlight, low surface-water phosphorous concentration and high metalimnetic volume. Consequently, a single-sensor approach does not necessarily reflect whole-ecosystem carbon dynamics in stratified lakes.

AB - Many lakes exhibit seasonal stratification, during which they develop strong thermal and chemical gradients. An expansion of depth-integrated monitoring programs has provided insight into the importance of organic carbon processing that occurs below the upper mixed layer. However, the chemical and physical drivers of metabolism and metabolic coupling remain unresolved, especially in the metalimnion. In this depth zone, sharp gradients in key resources such as light and temperature co-occur with dynamic physical conditions that influence metabolic processes directly and simultaneously hamper the accurate tracing of biological activity. We evaluated the drivers of metalimnetic metabolism and its associated uncertainty across 10 stratified lakes in Europe and North America. We hypothesized that the metalimnion would contribute highly to whole-lake functioning in clear oligotrophic lakes, and that metabolic rates would be highly variable in unstable polymictic lakes. Depth-integrated rates of gross primary production (GPP) and ecosystem respiration (ER) were modelled from diel dissolved oxygen curves using a Bayesian approach. Metabolic estimates were more uncertain below the epilimnion, but uncertainty was not consistently related to lake morphology or mixing regime. Metalimnetic rates exhibited high day-to-day variability in all trophic states, with the metalimnetic contribution to daily whole-lake GPP and ER ranging from 0% to 87% and < 1% to 92%, respectively. Nonetheless, the metalimnion of low-nutrient lakes contributed strongly to whole-lake metabolism on average, driven by a collinear combination of highlight, low surface-water phosphorous concentration and high metalimnetic volume. Consequently, a single-sensor approach does not necessarily reflect whole-ecosystem carbon dynamics in stratified lakes.

U2 - 10.1002/lno.10504

DO - 10.1002/lno.10504

M3 - Article

VL - 62

SP - 1288

EP - 1306

JO - Limnology and Oceanography

JF - Limnology and Oceanography

SN - 0024-3590

IS - 3

ER -