Abstract

Colour and dissolved organic carbon (DOC) concentrations and mass balances were measured for seven unproductive lakes and 20 tributary streams between June 1980 and May 1992. Individual observations of colour, which measures an unknown DOC fraction assumed to be principally humic, were not good predictors of discrete DOC concentrations for any of the study sites. Long-term mean colour was, however, strongly correlated with long-term mean DOC concentrations in streams and lakes. Colour behaved differently from the total DOC pool in lakes. Lake retention and loss coefficients for colour were always higher than corresponding values for the total DOC pool, and the mean annual colour/DOC ratios in lake outflows were always less than the corresponding ratios in lake inputs, indicating that the coloured fraction was preferentially removed or photooxidized. A steady-state mass balance model was used to estimate the upper bound for the average coloured fraction of DOC in each lake. The upper bound for the seven lakes ranged from 34 to 88%, increasing with increasing colour, DOC, and total phosphorus.

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