Abstract. Salt marsh ecosystems have been considered not susceptible to nitrogen overloading because early studies suggested that salt marshes adsorbed excess nutrients in plant growth. However, the possible effect of nutrient loading on species composition, and the combined effects of nutrients and altered species composition on structure and function, was largely ignored. Failure to understand interactions between nutrient loading and species composition may lead to severe underestimates of the impacts of stresses. We altered whole salt marsh ecosystems (;60 000 m 2 /treatment) by addition of nutrients in flooding waters and by reduction of a key predatory fish, the mummichog. We added nutrients (N and P; 15-fold increase over ambient conditions) directly to the flooding tide to mimic the way anthropogenic nutrients are delivered to marsh ecosystems. Despite the high concentrations (70 mmol N/L) achieved in the water column, our annual N loadings (15-60 g NÁm À2 Áyr À1 ) were an order of magnitude less than most plot-level fertilization experiments, yet we detected responses at several trophic levels. Preliminary calculations suggest that 30-40% of the added N was removed by the marsh during each tidal cycle. Creek bank Spartina alterniflora and high marsh S. patens production increased, but not stunted high marsh S. alterniflora. Microbial production increased in the fertilized creek bank S. alterniflora habitat where benthic microalgae also increased. We found top-down control of benthic microalgae by killifish, but only under nutrient addition and in the opposite direction (increase) than that predicted by a fish-invertebrate-microalgae trophic cascade. Surprisingly, infauna declined in abundance during the first season of fertilization and with fish removal. Our results demonstrate ecological effects of both nutrient addition and mummichog reduction at the whole-system level, including evidence for synergistic interactions.
We introduced an 15N-NH4+ tracer to the riparian forest of a salmon-bearing stream (Kennedy Creek, Washington, USA) to quantify the cycling and fate of a late-season pulse of salmon N and, ultimately, mechanisms regulating potential links between salmon abundance and tree growth. The 15N tracer simulated deposition of 7.25 kg of salmon (fresh) to four 50-m2 plots. We added NH4+ (the initial product of salmon carcass decay) and other important nutrients provided by carcasses (P, S, K, Mg, Ca) to soils in late October 2003, coincident with local salmon spawning. We followed the 15N tracer through soil and tree pools for one year. Biological uptake of the 15N tracer occurred quickly: 64% of the 15N tracer was bound in soil microbiota within 14 days, and roots of the dominant riparian tree, western red cedar (Thuja plicata), began to take up 15N tracer within seven days. Root uptake continued through the winter. The 15N tracer content of soil organic matter reached a maximum of approximately 52%, five weeks after the application, and a relative equilibrium of approximately 40% within five months. Six months after the addition, in spring 2004, at least 37% of the 15N tracer was found in tree tissues: approximately 23% in foliage, approximately 11% in roots, and approximately 3% in stems. Within the stems, xylem and phloem sap contained approximately 96% of the tracer N, and approximately 4% was in structural xylem N. After one year, at least 28% of the 15N tracer was still found in trees, and loss from the plots was only approximately 20%. The large portion of tracer N taken up in the fall and reallocated to leaves and stems the following spring provides mechanistic evidence for a one-year-lagged tree-growth response to salmon nutrients. Salmon nutrients have been deposited in the Kennedy Creek system each fall for centuries, but the system shows no evidence of nutrient saturation. Rates of N uptake and retention are a function of site history and disturbance and also may be the result of a legacy effect, in which annual salmon nutrient addition may lead to increased efficiency of nutrient uptake and use.
in the fertilized system but could not be accurately calculated in the reference system due to rapid (,4 h) NO 3 À turnover. Over the fiveday paired tracer addition, sediments sequestered a small fraction of incoming NO 3 À , although the efficiency of sequestration was 3.8% in the reference system and 0.7% in the fertilized system. Gross sediment N sequestration rates were similar at 13.5 and 12.6 molÁha À1 Ád À1 , respectively. Macrophyte NO 3 À uptake efficiency, based on tracer incorporation in aboveground tissues, was considerably higher in the reference system (16.8%) than the fertilized system (2.6%), although bulk uptake of NO 3 À by plants was lower in the reference system (1.75 mol NO 3) than the fertilized system (;10 mol NO 3 À Áha À1 Ád À1 ). Nitrogen processing efficiency decreased with NO 3 À load in all pools, suggesting that the nutrient processing capacity of the marsh ecosystem was exceeded in the fertilized marsh.
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