Abstract

From February 1992 until June 1993, the distribution of dissolved and particulate phosphorus and nitrogen was investigated in the Ems estuary at approximately monthly intervals. Nutrient import was quantified from the river load. Nutrient export to sea was quantified from river discharge and from the salinity-nutrient gradient in the outer estuary. In addition, sediment cores were taken from four sites along the main axis of the estuary in October 1992. On the basis of these data a nitrogen and phosphorus budget was made. On an annual basis, 45 × 106 mol P and 2,360 × 106 mol N are imported into the Ems estuary. Freshwater runoff is the main source of input, accounting for about 92% of the nitrogen input and 71% of the phosphorus input. Import of particulate phosphorus from the sea is important in the phosphorus budget (27%). Seventy-five percent of the nitrogen input is transported to the North Sea. Denitrification is the major loss factor (19% of the nitrogen input), and burial explains 6%. Of the phosphorus input, 60% is transported to the North Sea and 40% accumulates in the sediment. Nitrogen import during summer explains about one third of the annual primary production, indicating that nitrogen turn over is about three times. Phosphorus import during summer explains less than 16% of the annual primary production. We suggest that trapping of particulate P and adsorption onto Fe(oxy)hydroxides during the entire year and the release of Fe-bound P during summer after reduction of Fe(oxy)hydroxides is instrumental in sustaining high primary production, which could not be sustained if it depended only on P imported during the growing season.

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