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Dissolved Inorganic Geogenic Phosphorus Load to a Groundwater-Fed Lake: Implications of Terrestrial Phosphorus Cycling by Groundwater

Nisbeth, Catharina Simone; Kidmose, Jacob; Weckstr�m, Kaarina; Reitzel, Kasper; Odgaard, Bent Vad; Bennike, Ole; Thorling, L�rke; McGowan, Suzanne; Schomacker, Anders; Kristensen, David Lajer Juul; Jessen, S�ren

Dissolved Inorganic Geogenic Phosphorus Load to a Groundwater-Fed Lake: Implications of Terrestrial Phosphorus Cycling by Groundwater Thumbnail


Authors

Catharina Simone Nisbeth

Jacob Kidmose

Kaarina Weckstr�m

Kasper Reitzel

Bent Vad Odgaard

Ole Bennike

L�rke Thorling

Suzanne McGowan

Anders Schomacker

David Lajer Juul Kristensen

S�ren Jessen



Abstract

The general perception has long been that lake eutrophication is driven by anthropogenic sources of phosphorus (P) and that P is immobile in the subsurface and in aquifers. Combined investigation of the current water and P budgets of a 70 ha lake (Nørresø, Fyn, Denmark) in a clayey till-dominated landscape and of the lake’s Holocene trophic history demonstrates a potential significance of geogenic (natural) groundwater-borne P. Nørresø receives water from nine streams, a groundwater-fed spring located on a small island, and precipitation. The lake loses water by evaporation and via a single outlet. Monthly measurements of stream, spring, and outlet discharge, and of tracers in the form of temperature, δ18O and δ2H of water, and water chemistry were conducted. The tracers indicated that the lake receives groundwater from an underlying regional confined glaciofluvial sand aquifer via the spring and one of the streams. In addition, the lake receives a direct groundwater input (estimated as the water balance residual) via the lake bed, as supported by the artesian conditions of underlying strata observed in piezometers installed along the lake shore and in wells tapping the regional confined aquifer. The groundwater in the regional confined aquifer was anoxic, ferrous, and contained 4–5 µmol/L dissolved inorganic orthophosphate (DIP). Altogether, the data indicated that groundwater contributes from 64% of the water-borne external DIP loading to the lake, and up to 90% if the DIP concentration of the spring, as representative for the average DIP of the regional confined aquifer, is assigned to the estimated groundwater input. In support, paleolimnological data retrieved from sediment cores indicated that Nørresø was never P-poor, even before the introduction of agriculture at 6000 years before present. Accordingly, groundwater-borne geogenic phosphorus can have an important influence on the trophic state of recipient surface water ecosystems, and groundwater-borne P can be a potentially important component of the terrestrial P cycle.

Citation

Nisbeth, C. S., Kidmose, J., Weckström, K., Reitzel, K., Odgaard, B. V., Bennike, O., …Jessen, S. (2019). Dissolved Inorganic Geogenic Phosphorus Load to a Groundwater-Fed Lake: Implications of Terrestrial Phosphorus Cycling by Groundwater. Water, 11(11), Article 2213. https://doi.org/10.3390/w11112213

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date Oct 16, 2019
Online Publication Date Oct 24, 2019
Publication Date Oct 24, 2019
Deposit Date Aug 21, 2020
Publicly Available Date Aug 24, 2020
Journal Water
Electronic ISSN 2073-4441
Publisher MDPI
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 11
Issue 11
Article Number 2213
DOI https://doi.org/10.3390/w11112213
Keywords Geography, Planning and Development; Aquatic Science; Biochemistry; Water Science and Technology
Public URL https://nottingham-repository.worktribe.com/output/4194141
Publisher URL https://www.mdpi.com/2073-4441/11/11/2213

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