“…Furthermore, a commercially available humic substance called HuminFeedÒ (Humintech, Germany) has been widely used in mesocosm experiments investigating allo-OM inputs to lakes (Rasconi et al, 2015;Urrutia-Cordero et al, 2017;Lebret et al, 2018;Minguez et al, 2020). Considering the complexity of catchment-dependent allo-OM characteristics, other mesocosm studies have mimicked allo-OM using a range of different types of natural mixtures such as i) humic soil and inorganic N and P additions (Lefe ´bure et al, 2013), ii) leaf leachate and inorganic N and P additions (Hitchcock et al, 2016;Brighenti et al, 2018;Tonetta et al, 2018), iii) filtered and concentrated humic lake water (Nicolle et al, 2012;Cooke et al, 2015;Hamdan et al, 2021), and iv) organic matter-rich top soils from inflowing rivers produced by preserving natural fine soil particles (Liess et al, 2015). In addition, in order to separate the browning effect from allo-OM as energy source effects, some authors simulated light reduction by adding a black net to reduce solar irradiance (Urabe et al, 2002;Brighenti et al, 2018).…”