Abstract

Long-term and seasonal changes in production and respiration were surveyed in the Valle de Bravo reservoir, Mexico, in a period during which high water-level fluctuations occurred (2006–2015). We assessed the community metabolism through oxygen dynamics in this monomictic water-body affected by strong diurnal winds. The multiple-year data series allowed relationships with some environmental drivers to be identified, revealing that water level-fluctuations strongly influenced gross primary production and respiratory rates. Production and respiration changed mainly vertically, clearly in relation to light availability. Gross primary production ranged from 0.15 to 1.26 gO2 m−2 h−1, respiration rate from −0.13 to −0.83 gO2 m−2 h−1 and net primary production from −0.36 to 0.66 gO2 m−2 h −1 within the production layer, which had a mean depth of 5.9 m during the stratification periods and of 6.8 m during the circulations. The greater depth of the mixing layer allowed the consumption of oxygen below the production layer even during the stratifications, when it averaged 10.1 m. Respiration below the production layer ranged from −0.23 to −1.38 gO2 m−2 h−1. Vertically integrated metabolic rates (per unit area) showed their greatest variations at the intra-annual scale (stratification-circulation). Gross primary production and Secchi depth decreased as the mean water level decreased between stratification periods. VB is a highly productive ecosystem; its gross primary production averaged 3.60 gC m−2 d−1 during the 10 years sampled, a rate similar to that of hypertrophic systems. About 45% of this production, an annual average net carbon production of 599 g C m−2 year−1, was exported to the hypolimnion, but on the average 58% of this net production was recycled through respiration below the production layer. Overall, only 19% of the carbon fixed in VB is buried in the sediments. Total ecosystem respiration rates averaged −6.89 gC m−2 d−1 during 2006–2015, doubling the gross production rates. The reservoir as a whole exhibited a net heterotrophic balance continuously during the decade sampled, which means it has likely been a net carbon source, potentially releasing an average of 3.29 gC m−2 d−1 to the atmosphere. These results are in accordance with recent findings that tropical eutrophic aquatic ecosystems can be stronger carbon sources than would be extrapolated from temperate systems, and can help guide future reassessments on the contribution of tropical lakes and reservoirs to carbon cycles at the global scale. Respiration was positively correlated with temperature both for the stratification periods and among the circulations, suggesting that the contribution of C to the atmosphere may increase as the reservoirs and lakes warm up owing to climate change and as their water level is reduced through intensification of their use as water sources.

Highlights

  • Ecosystem-scale metabolic rates represent an integrated measure of the ecosystem functioning in terms of organic matter production and consumption (Odum, 1971), and are fundamental metrics of the ecosystem (Hoellein, Bruesewitz & Richardson, 2013)

  • Because metabolic measurements are done on a volumetric basis and have to be integrated, first vertically, for the 24 h period, and converted to carbon units, results are here presented sequentially, from the most simple data to the final integrated measurements and their correlation with physical drivers, to address the main question of this paper: how the metabolism of an hypertrophic tropical reservoir behaves in the face of variations in water level and temperature

  • Our results indicate that for each 1 ◦C increase in the lake temperature its respiration and C emission could further increase by 0.4–0.9 gC m−2d−1; this is consistent with the findings of Kosten et al (2010) on CO2 emission from lakes, and suggests one of the negative feedbacks between climate change and eutrophication that could be expected in heterotrophic tropical systems

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Summary

Introduction

Ecosystem-scale metabolic rates represent an integrated measure of the ecosystem functioning in terms of organic matter production and consumption (Odum, 1971), and are fundamental metrics of the ecosystem (Hoellein, Bruesewitz & Richardson, 2013). These integrated measures are needed to build regional and global balances of important biochemical elements, mainly oxygen and carbon (Raymond et al, 2013), which may be estimated through the oxygen dynamics linkage to photosynthesis and aerobic respiration. Because eutrophication ranks in first place among the problems faced by limnology, and it is expected to remain as the main issue in aquatic ecosystems in the future (Downing, 2014), it is important to study the metabolic balance of tropical eutrophic systems

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