Phosphorus fractions in sediment profiles and their potential contributions to eutrophication in Dianchi Lake

被引:135
|
作者
Gao, L
Zhou, JMM
Yang, H
Chen, J
机构
[1] Chinese Acad Sci, State Key Lab Soil & Sustainable Agr, Inst Soil Sci, Nanjing 210008, Peoples R China
[2] Yantai Univ, Ocean Sch, Shandong 264005, Peoples R China
来源
ENVIRONMENTAL GEOLOGY | 2005年 / 48卷 / 07期
关键词
sediment; phosphorus forms; vertical distribution; Dianchi Lake; China;
D O I
10.1007/s00254-005-0005-3
中图分类号
X [环境科学、安全科学];
学科分类号
08 ; 0830 ;
摘要
Dianchi Lake is a eutrophic lake in southwestern China. Sediment and the bottom water samples were taken from six sites in the east, west, south, north and center of the lake, respectively, in December 2002. Total phosphorus (TP) concentrations in sediments were high and reached a maximum value of 6.66 g/kg. There was a soluble reactive phosphorus (SRP) concentration gradient at the sediment-water interface. In the present study, sediment P was divided into loosely adsorbed P (NH4Cl-P), redox-sensitive P (BD-P), metal oxides bound P (NaOH-P), calcium bound P (HCl-P), and organic P (Org-P). At three of the six sites selected, the concentrations of different P forms in sediments followed the order: NaOH-P, Org-P > HCl-P > BDP > NH4Cl-P in the profile, and in the southern lake the order was HCl-P > NaOH-P, Org-P > BDP > NH4Cl-P in the top 15 cm layers of the sediments. The sediment profiles showed that different forms of P had an increasing trend upward toward the sediment surface. There is a considerable potential for release from the sediment into the overlying water and sediment P could be the dominant factor determining the trophic status of the lake if the external load is reduced.
引用
收藏
页码:835 / 844
页数:10
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] Contributions of phosphatase and microbial activity to internal phosphorus loading and their relation to lake eutrophication
    SONG Chunlei
    Graduate School of the Chinese Academy of Sciences
    Science China Earth Sciences, 2006, (S1) : 102 - 113
  • [32] Characteristics of bioavailable organic phosphorus in sediment and its contribution to lake eutrophication in China
    Ni, Zhaokui
    Wang, Shengrui
    Wang, Yuemin
    ENVIRONMENTAL POLLUTION, 2016, 219 : 537 - 544
  • [33] Contributions of phosphatase and microbial activity to internal phosphorus loading and their relation to lake eutrophication
    Chunlei Song
    Xiuyun Cao
    Jianqiu Li
    Qingman Li
    Guoyuan Chen
    Yiyong Zhou
    Science in China Series D, 2006, 49 : 102 - 113
  • [34] Phosphorus and Patchogue Lake eutrophication
    Rana, MA
    Piekut, M
    Rana, S
    PHOSPHORUS IN PLANT BIOLOGY: REGULATORY ROLES IN MOLECULAR, CELLULAR, ORGANISMIC, AND ECOSYSTEM PROCESSES, 1999, 19 : 306 - 308
  • [35] PHOSPHORUS MODEL OF LAKE EUTROPHICATION
    IMBODEN, DM
    LIMNOLOGY AND OCEANOGRAPHY, 1974, 19 (02) : 297 - 304
  • [36] Reducing river export of nutrients and eutrophication in Lake Dianchi in the future
    Ma, Chuan
    Strokal, Maryna
    Kroeze, Carolien
    Wang, Mengru
    Li, Xiaolin
    Hofstra, Nynke
    Ma, Lin
    BLUE-GREEN SYSTEMS, 2020, 2 (01) : 73 - 90
  • [37] Pyrolysis characteristics of sediment from the Dianchi Lake
    Wu, Zhenfen
    Luo, Huilong
    Proceedings of the 2016 4th International Conference on Machinery, Materials and Information Technology Applications, 2016, 71 : 135 - 138
  • [38] EFFECT OF CARBON POLLUTION ON LAKE EUTROPHICATION IN DIANCHI BASIN, CHINA
    Zhang, Lan
    Liu, Zhonghan
    Liu, Yongding
    Shen, Yingwu
    Lie, Jufen
    Peng, Jiangyan
    FRESENIUS ENVIRONMENTAL BULLETIN, 2012, 21 (2A): : 475 - 485
  • [39] The comparison of phosphorus pools from the sediment in two bays of Lake Dianchi for cyanobacterial bloom assessment
    Hu, Jun
    Liu, Yongding
    Liu, Jiantong
    ENVIRONMENTAL MONITORING AND ASSESSMENT, 2006, 121 (1-3) : 1 - 14
  • [40] Matrix-bound phosphine, phosphorus fractions and phosphatase activity through sediment profiles in Lake Chaohu, China
    Ding, Wei
    Zhu, Renbin
    Hou, Lijun
    Wang, Qing
    ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE-PROCESSES & IMPACTS, 2014, 16 (05) : 1135 - 1144