Streams play a key role in the global carbon cycle. The balance between carbon intake through photosynthesis and carbon release via respiration influences carbon emissions from streams and depends on temperature. However, the lack of a comprehensive analysis of the temperature sensitivity of the metabolic balance in inland waters across latitudes and local climate conditions hinders an accurate projection of carbon emissions in a warmer future. Here, we use a model of diel dissolved oxygen dynamics, combined with high-frequency measurements of dissolved oxygen, light and temperature, to estimate the temperature sensitivities of gross primary production and ecosystem respiration in streams across six biomes, from the tropics to the arctic tundra. We find that the change in metabolic balance, that is, the ratio of gross primary production to ecosystem respiration, is a function of stream temperature and current metabolic balance. Applying this relationship to the global compilation of stream metabolism data, we find that a 1 °C increase in stream temperature leads to a convergence of metabolic balance and to a 23.6% overall decline in net ecosystem productivity across the streams studied. We suggest that if the relationship holds for similarly sized streams around the globe, the warming-induced shifts in metabolic balance will result in an increase of 0.0194 Pg carbon emitted from such streams every year.
Anthropogenic increases in nitrogen (N) and phosphorus (P) concentrations can strongly influence the structure and function of ecosystems. Even though lotic ecosystems receive cumulative inputs of nutrients applied to and deposited on land, no comprehensive assessment has quantified nutrient‐enrichment effects within streams and rivers. We conducted a meta‐analysis of published studies that experimentally increased concentrations of N and/or P in streams and rivers to examine how enrichment alters ecosystem structure (state: primary producer and consumer biomass and abundance) and function (rate: primary production, leaf breakdown rates, metabolism) at multiple trophic levels (primary producer, microbial heterotroph, primary and secondary consumers, and integrated ecosystem). Our synthesis included 184 studies, 885 experiments, and 3497 biotic responses to nutrient enrichment. We documented widespread increases in organismal biomass and abundance (mean response = +48%) and rates of ecosystem processes (+54%) to enrichment across multiple trophic levels, with no large differences in responses among trophic levels or between autotrophic or heterotrophic food‐web pathways. Responses to nutrient enrichment varied with the nutrient added (N, P, or both) depending on rate versus state variable and experiment type, and were greater in flume and whole‐stream experiments than in experiments using nutrient‐diffusing substrata. Generally, nutrient‐enrichment effects also increased with water temperature and light, and decreased under elevated ambient concentrations of inorganic N and/or P. Overall, increased concentrations of N and/or P altered multiple food‐web pathways and trophic levels in lotic ecosystems. Our results indicate that preservation or restoration of biodiversity and ecosystem functions of streams and rivers requires management of nutrient inputs and consideration of multiple trophic pathways.
Nutrient releases and spiraling metrics are frequently used to quantify the downstream transport of nutrients and to better understand the effects of anthropogenic inputs to downstream waters. Ambient uptake rates in streams can be measured through stable isotope enrichments, while pulse and plateau additions can estimate such rates via extrapolation and modeling techniques, respectively. Data from these releases can be used to estimate ambient uptake rates from nutrient additions and possibly determine the functional relationships between nutrient concentrations and uptake rates. Here, we compared estimated ambient rates calculated from established pulse and plateau approaches, results obtained from new modeling approaches, and rates at ambient concentrations from stable isotope enrichments. Comparative releases of NH 4 Cl and 15 NH 4 Cl were conducted in four experimental reaches across the grassland Kings Creek and urban Campus Creek, KS. Nutrient uptake was predominantly linear with increasing ammonium. Estimated ambient uptake rates varied among sites, release methods, and data analysis approaches.However, plateau ambient rates from new modeling approaches matched closely with measured ambient rates from isotope enrichments at three sites, suggesting that modeled plateau data may be best for a first look at determining nutrient uptake rates at an individual site. Limitations and benefits of each approach vary; however, baseflow discharge may be a key driver when choosing a method. If possible, multiple methods should be attempted at each location and under each novel set of conditions to determine the best approach prior to designing and implementing a more extensive series of measurements.
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