Abstract

We measured porewater profiles of inorganic (NH + ,N O − (+NO − ), PO 3− 4 (here- after referred to as DIP)) and organic (DON, DOP) nutrients in seagrass-vegetated sediments at two sites in a shallow bay in Bermuda within close proximity (200 m) but subject to different nutrient loading. At both sites, total dissolved and inorganic nutrient concentrations were usually 1-2 orders of magnitude higher in the sediments than in the water column, with the exception of NO − . Organic N and P were significant components of the total dissolved nutrient pools both in the sediment porewater and in the overlying water column (up to 75% for DON and 40% for DOP), and may be important in meeting plant nutrient demands. We used two approaches to examine how well porewater nutrient concentrations reflected the relative availabilities of N and P for seagrasses: (1) a simple stoichiometric nutrient regeneration model based on the N:P ratio of decomposing organic matter and porewater NH + concentrations to predict porewater DIP, and (2) fitting of the porewater profiles to estimate rates of net nutrient production (or consumption), which reflects the balance between nutrient sources and sinks in the rhizosphere. The stoichiometric model indicated that sediment porewaters were depleted in P relative to N in the low-nutrient outer bay site, and enriched in P relative to N in the higher- nutrient inner bay site. These results are consistent with the mechanism of carbonate sediments in oligotrophic tropical environments being a strong sink for dissolved inorganic P and our previous work suggesting that nutrient enrichment causes P to become disproportionately more available than N. Net nutrient production rates of porewater P at both sites and N at the inner bay site were low (typically < 2%) relative to the nutrient demands of the seagrasses. The implications of the profile interpretation are two-fold: (1) the low rates of net nutrient production indicate diffusive losses from the root zone were insignificant and that nutrient turnover rates were high, except in the P-limited outer bay where N accumulated in sediment porewaters; and (2) because standing stock nutrient concentrations often represent a small fraction of the total nutrients cycled in the sediments, they are in many cases a poor indicator of nutrient availability. Based on our estimates of losses from the root zone, decomposition, and plant uptake we have constructed a rough budget for the cycling of P and N at our two sites.

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