Abstract

As long as lakes and reservoirs are an important component of the global carbon cycle, monitoring of their metabolism is required, especially in the tropics. In particular, the response of deep reservoirs to water-level fluctuations (WLF) is an understudied field. Here, we study community metabolism through oxygen dynamics in a deep monomictic reservoir where high WLF (~10 m) have recently occurred. Simultaneous monitoring of environmental variables and zooplankton dynamics was used to assess the effects of WLF on the metabolism of the eutrophic Valle de Bravo (VB) reservoir, where cyanobacteria blooms are frequent. Mean gross primary production (P g) was high (2.2 g C m−2 day−1), but temporal variation of P g was low except for a drastic reduction during circulation attributed to zooplankton grazing. The trophogenic layer showed net autotrophy on an annual basis, but turned to net heterotrophy during mixing, and furthermore when the whole water-column oxygen balance was calculated, considering the aphotic respiration (R aphotic). The high total respiration resulting (3.1 g C m−2 day−1) is considered to be partly due to mixing enhanced by WLF. Net ecosystem production was equivalent to a net export of 3.4 mg CO2 m−2 day−1 to the atmosphere. Low water levels are posed to intensify boundary-mixing events driven by the wind during the stratification in VB. Long-term monitoring showed changes in the planktonic community and a strong silicon decrease that matched with low water-level periods. The effects of low water-level on metabolism and planktonic community in VB suggest that water-level manipulation could be a useful management tool to promote phytoplankton groups other than cyanobacteria.

Highlights

  • Recent assessments show that freshwater ecosystems constitute a significant component of the global carbon cycle that deserves attention (Cole et al 2007)

  • Our results confirm the usefulness of monitoring oxygen dynamics using enclosures to assess community metabolism in windy systems

  • Following the evolution of Pg, R, and Pn during high waterlevel fluctuations (WLF) in the deep reservoir of Valle de Bravo (VB) helped identify the effect of extreme low water levels on the planktonic community metabolism and structure

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Recent assessments show that freshwater ecosystems constitute a significant component of the global carbon cycle that deserves attention (Cole et al 2007). Studies on carbon fluxes and community metabolism are scarce, in tropical lakes and reservoirs (St. Louis et al 2000; Staehr et al 2012). When the combined action of both biological and physical processes cannot replenish the oxygen consumed within an aquatic system, a level of “critical eutrophication” is reached (Mee 1988) and most biogeochemical cycles are drastically altered. On account of their relatively reduced surface, deep lakes and reservoirs are more vulnerable than shallow ones

Objectives
Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call