Redirigiendo al acceso original de articulo en 19 segundos...
Inicio  /  Water Research  /  Vol: 119 Par: 0 (2017)  /  Artículo
ARTÍCULO
TITULO

Spatial identification of critical nutrient loads of large shallow lakes: Implications for Lake Taihu (China)

Annette B.G. Janssen    
Victor C.L. de Jager    
Jan H. Janse    
Xiangzhen Kong    
... Wolf M. Mooij    

Resumen

Ongoing eutrophication frequently causes toxic phytoplankton blooms. This induces huge worldwide challenges for drinking water quality, food security and public health. Of crucial importance in avoiding and reducing blooms is to determine the maximum nutrient load ecosystems can absorb, while remaining in a good ecological state. These so called critical nutrient loads for lakes depend on the shape of the load-response curve. Due to spatial variation within lakes, load-response curves and therefore critical nutrient loads could vary throughout the lake. In this study we determine spatial patterns in critical nutrient loads for Lake Taihu (China) with a novel modelling approach called Spatial Ecosystem Bifurcation Analysis (SEBA). SEBA evaluates the impact of the lake's total external nutrient load on the local lake dynamics, resulting in a map of critical nutrient loads for different locations throughout the lake. Our analysis shows that the largest part of Lake Taihu follows a nonlinear load-response curve without hysteresis. The corresponding critical nutrient loads vary within the lake and depend on management goals, i.e. the maximum allowable chlorophyll concentration. According to our model, total nutrient loads need to be more than halved to reach chlorophyll-a concentrations of 30?40 µg L-1 in most sections of the lake. To prevent phytoplankton blooms with 20 µg L-1 chlorophyll-a throughout Lake Taihu, both phosphorus and nitrogen loads need a nearly 90% reduction. We conclude that our approach is of great value to determine critical nutrient loads of lake ecosystems such as Taihu and likely of spatially heterogeneous ecosystems in general.

 Artículos similares

       
 
Chuan Li, Haichun Wang, Yunsheng Wang, Lulu Wang, Xi Yang and Xiaorong Wan    
Fracture zones in front of tunnel faces can easily cause falling blocks and landslides during the construction process. Using seismic waves and ground-penetrating radar (GPR) data, we extracted the features of fracture zones and achieved the advanced pre... ver más
Revista: Applied Sciences

 
Ana M. Petrovic, Igor Le?ce?en and Ivan Radevski    
This paper presents a comprehensive analysis of flood frequency and a spatio-temporal characterization of historical torrential floods in the ?umadija region using water discharge datasets and documented events. A chronology of 344 recorded torrential fl... ver más
Revista: Water

 
Yansong Li, Yaning Chen, Yapeng Chen, Weili Duan, Jiayou Wang and Xu Wang    
Global changes in drought and wetness and their future trends in arid regions have recently become a major focus of research attention. The Tarim River Basin (TRB) in Xinjiang, China, is among the most climate-sensitive regions in the world. This study u... ver más
Revista: Water

 
Linfeng Wang, Shengbo Chen, Lei Chen, Zibo Wang, Bin Liu and Yucheng Xu    
Accurately mapping urban built-up areas is critical for monitoring urbanization and development. Previous studies have shown that Night light (NTL) data is effective in characterizing the extent of human activity. But its inherently low spatial resolutio... ver más

 
Cai Wu, Yanwen Wang, Jiong Wang, Menno-Jan Kraak and Mingshu Wang    
This study introduces a machine learning-based framework for mapping street patterns in urban morphology, offering an objective, scalable approach that transcends traditional methodologies. Focusing on six diverse cities, the research employed supervised... ver más