Nutrient sequestration in Aquitaine lakes (SW France) limits nutrient flux to the coastal zone

Buquet, D; Anschutz, P; Charbonnier, C; Rapin, A; Sinays, R; Canredon, A; Bujan, S; Poirier, D

HERO ID

4448452

Reference Type

Journal Article

Year

2017

HERO ID 4448452
In Press No
Year 2017
Title Nutrient sequestration in Aquitaine lakes (SW France) limits nutrient flux to the coastal zone
Authors Buquet, D; Anschutz, P; Charbonnier, C; Rapin, A; Sinays, R; Canredon, A; Bujan, S; Poirier, D
Journal Journal of Sea Research
Volume 130
Page Numbers 24-35
Abstract Oligotrophic coastal zones are disappearing from increased nutrient loading. The quantity of nutrients reaching the coast is determined not only by their original source (e.g. fertilizers used in agriculture, waste water discharges) and the land use, but also by the pathways through which nutrients are cycled from the source to the river mouth. In particular, lakes sequester nutrients and, hence, reduce downstream transfer of nutrients to coastal environments. Here, we quantify the impact of Aquitaine great lakes on the fluxes of dissolved macro nutrients (N, P, Si) to the Bay of Biscay. For that, we have measured nutrient concentrations and fluxes in 2014 upstream and downstream lakes of Lacanau and Carcans-Hourtin, which belongs to the catchment of the Arcachon Bay, which is the largest coastal lagoon of the Bay of Biscay French coast. Data were compared to values obtained from the Leyre river, the main freshwater and nutrient source for the lagoon. Results show that processes in lakes greatly limit nutrient flux to the lagoon compared to fluxes from Leyre river, although the watershed is similar in terms of land cover. In lakes, phosphorus and silicon are trapped for long term in the sediment, silicon as amorphous biogenic silica and phosphorus as organic P and P associated with Fe-oxides. Nitrogen that enters lakes mostly as nitrate is used for primary production. N is mineralized in the sediment; a fraction diffuses as ammonium. N-2 production through benthic denitrification extracts only 10% of dissolved inorganic nitrogen from the aquatic system. The main part is sequestered in organic-rich sediment that accumulates below 5 m depth in both lakes.
Doi 10.1016/j.seares.2017.04.006
Wosid WOS:000419410100004
Is Certified Translation No
Dupe Override 4448452
Is Public Yes
Keyword Aquitaine lakes; Arcachon lagoon; Nutrients; Benthic biogeochemistry; River export