Title of article :
Phosphorous dynamics in a temperate intertidal estuary
Author/Authors :
A. I. Lilleb?، نويسنده , ,
J. M. Neto، نويسنده , , M. R. Flindt، نويسنده , , J. C. Marques، نويسنده , , M. A. Pardal، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2004
Abstract :
Conservation and management of aquatic systems require detailed information of the processes that affect their functioning and
development. The objectives of the present work were to describe the phosphorus dynamics during a complete tidal cycle and to
quantify the relative contribution of the most common estuarine areas (e.g. seagrass beds, salt marshes, mud- and sand-flats without
vegetation) to phosphorus net internal loading in a temperate intertidal estuary.
Results show that phosphate efflux rates were higher during the first hours of tidal flood, and that phosphate concentrations were
lowest at high tide. During tidal ebbing, ephemeral tide pools may cover a considerable percentage of the intertidal area. In these
tide pools, water shallowness combined with enhanced temperatures stimulate the occurrence of high phosphate effluxes. The
effluxes to the main water body during high tide contributed 57% of dissolved inorganic phosphorus and efflux during low tide
contributed 43% to the net internal loading. Calculations of the phosphate net effluxes (kg P) indicate a strong contribution of the
bare bottom mud-flats to the whole system internal phosphate loading, especially during the warmer periods.
As a consequence of eutrophication, perennial benthic macrophytes are commonly replaced by fast-growing epiphytic
macroalgae. Calculations showed that for a hypothetical intertidal estuary in a temperate region, management programs considering
an eventual re-colonization of mud-flats by seagrasses or salt marsh plants may reduce the P-efflux by 13e16 kg ha 1. For example,
in the small Mondego estuary, eutrophication has contributed to a reduction of the Zostera noltii meadows, leading to an increase in
190 kg of phosphorus net internal loading.
Keywords :
estuaries , phosphate fluxes , Seagrass , tidal cycles , Salt marshes , sedimentewater
Journal title :
Estuarine, Coastal and Shelf Science
Journal title :
Estuarine, Coastal and Shelf Science