Estuaries: 2001 Publications
Author: Pinckney,
J.L., Paerl, H.W., Tester, P., and Richardson, T.L.
Title: The
role of nutrient loading and eutrophication in estuarine ecology.
Publication:
Environmental Health Perspectives 109:
699-706, 2001.
© National Institute of Environmental Health
Notes:Eutrophication
is a process that can be defined as an increase in the rate of supply of organic
matter (OM) to an ecosystem. We provide a general overview of the major features
driving estuarine eutrophication and outline some of the consequences of that
process. The main chemical constituent of OM is carbon (C), and therefore
rates of eutrophication are expressed in units of C per area per unit time.
OM occurs in both particulate and dissolved forms. Allochthonous OM originates
outside the estuary, whereas autochthonous OM is generated within the system,
mostly by primary producers or by benthic regeneration of OM. The supply rates
of limiting nutrients regulate phytoplankton productivity that contributes
to inputs of autochthonous OM. The trophic status of an estuary is often based
on eutrophication rates and can be categorized as oligotrophic (< 100 g
C m(-2) y(-1)), mesotrophic (100-300 g C m(- 2) y(-1)), eutrophic (300-500
g C m(-2) Y-1), or hypertrophic (> 500 g C m(-2) y(-1)). Ecosystem responses
to eutrophication depend on both export rates (flushing, microbially mediated
losses through respiration, and denitrification) and recycling/regeneration
rates within the estuary. The mitigation of the effects of eutrophication
involves the regulation of inorganic nutrient (primarily N and P) inputs into
receiving waters. Appropriately scaled and parameterized nutrient and hydrologic
controls are the only realistic options for controlling phytoplankton blooms,
algal toxicity, and other symptoms of eutrophication-in estuarine ecosystems.
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