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  Journal > Table of Contents > Volume 3 Issue 1 > Abstract
 

A biogeochemical comparison of Lakes Superior and Malawi and the limnological consequences of an endless summer

R.E. Hecky

Environment Canada, National Water Research Institute P.O. Box 5050, Burlington ON L7R 4A6 CANADA

Abstract

  Fundamental differences between tropical and temperate great lakes are the continuously high temperature throughout the water column in tropical lakes and high rates of annual photosynthesis possible under continuously high solar irradiance. These aspects not only lead to permanent stratification and hypolimnetic anoxia in the deepest tropical lakes, but also they have consequences for oxygen concentrations throughout the water column and can dramatically affect biogeochemical cycles of carbon, nitrogen and phosphorus. Denitrification and enhanced regeneration of phosphorus from metal oxides cause low nitrogen:phosphorus ratios in the deep waters of tropical lakes and create a mitrogen deficit when deep waters mix into surface waters which is met through N-fixation. Comparison of the whole lake nutrient budgets of Lakes Superior and Malawi demonstrate the effects of the preferential regeneration of phosphorus in Lake Malawi and loss of nitrogen. In the upper two hundred meters of permanently stratified Lake Malawi, nitrogen has a residence time of two years while in dimictic Lake Superior nitrogen residence time is over 50 years. This disparity in residence time indicates that nitrogen is poorly recycled to the mixed layer of Malawi. The physical climate of tropical great lakes affects nutrient biogeochemical cycles differently and imposes biogeochemical characteristics different from temperate lakes on the water quality. In particular, tropical lakes have low nitrogen to phosphorus ratios and chronic anoxia which will lead to rapid proliferation of nitrogen fixing filamentous cyanobacteria when nutrient loading increases. The chronic hypoxia of tropical lakes will also enhance release of phosphorus bound to metal oxides and allow soil erosion to induce eutrophication in tropical lakes.

Keywords: Great Lakes; Nutrient cycles; Productivity; Nutrient Budgets; Tropical Lakes

Aquatic Ecosystem Health and Management: 3(1); 23-34
 

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