Abstract

There is growing interest in applying δ15N in biota as an indicator of anthropogenic nutrient inputs to coastal environments because changes in δ15N correlate to inputs of land-based nutrients. In complex coastal receiving waters, however, land-use effects on biota δ15N may be masked by local hydrologic processes, especially exchange with coastal waters of different geochemical character. We examined δ15N differences among larval fish, a novel biotic indicator, in coastal receiving waters at both among and within watershed scales. Our goal was to characterize how hydrologic processes within coastal river mouths and embayments mediate the effect of land-based N sources on larval fish δ15N. We sampled three Lake Superior river-embayment systems from watersheds that span a large population density gradient. Over all stations, mean fish δ15N ranged from 2.7 ‰ to 10.8 ‰. Within each system, we found a different pattern in δ15N across the river–lake transition zone. Correlations between fish δ15N and water quality, particularly NH 4 + and total nitrogen, were highly significant and corresponded to known differences in sewage waste water inputs. A multivariate model that included both watershed-based population density and NH 4 + was found to provide the best fit to the δ15N data among a series of multi- and univariate candidate models. These results demonstrate that: (1) fish larvae δ15N responded at within watershed scales, and (2) within coastal receiving waters, fish larvae δ15N was related to waste water inputs at the watershed scale; however, expression at specific locations within a coastal system was strongly influenced by local hydrologic processes.

Full Text
Paper version not known

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