Nitrogen and Phosphorus Colimitation of Phytoplankton in Lake Baikal: Insights From a Spatial Survey and Nutrient Enrichment Experiments

Document Type

Article

Publication Date

7-1-2017

Description

Lake Baikal, Siberia, is the most biodiverse freshwater lake on Earth. However, despite decades of painstaking limnological research on Baikal, broad spatial data on nutrient (nitrogen (N), phosphorus (P), silica (Si)) concentrations and temperature are sparse, as is our understanding of the bottom-up factors that limit phytoplankton in the lake. Earlier studies have suggested both N and P as limiting nutrients in Baikal, but the evidence, mostly based on elemental ratios, is limited and somewhat conflicting. We present experimental evidence that N and P co-limit phytoplankton productivity in some areas of Baikal during summer, along with the results of a comprehensive spatial survey of surface temperature, nutrients and chlorophyll a (Chl a) in Lake Baikal that support the experimental finding of colimitation. Surface water incubations from two trophically contrasting locations revealed co-limitation by N and P, as well as a positive effect of temperature (fluorescence after 5 d was ∼10% higher at 15°C than at 10°C). In a linear model of the survey data (26 sampling locations), N, P, and their interaction (N × P) were all significant predictors of Chl a concentration, indicating that either N or P (or both) may limit summer phytoplankton, depending on location. In contrast to the incubation experiments, temperature was not a significant predictor of Chl a concentration across the 26 sites we sampled. Lake Baikal is undergoing rapid warming and increased nutrient loading, which may boost phytoplankton productivity in the lake; however, the magnitude of this response will depend on ratios of soluble N and P inputs.

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