Abstract

The severity of phosphorus deficiency varies greatly among lakes. Is this variation related to particular morphological, chemical, or biological characteristics of lakes? These questions were addressed by sampling 49 lakes in Quebec, Ontario, and the northeastern United States. The rate constant of orthophosphate uptake (k1), a measure of orthophosphate demand:supply, proved to be only weakly related to watershed area and to the total phosphorus (P) concentration of the water (R2 = 0.210). Abundance of the biota and other aspects of water chemistry were all unrelated to the intensity of P-deficiency as it varies among lakes. In contrast, within-lake seasonal variability of the rate constant of orthophosphate turnover (kt, which is approximately equal to k1) is strongly related to temperature and bacterial abundance (R2 = 0.575 to 0.828). The results indicate that the seasonal variation in phosphorus deficiency depends strongly on bacterioplankton activity, whereas inter-lake variability in phosphorus deficiency is determined mainly by factors other than morphometry, plankton abundance, or trophic richness.

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