Dominance of biologically produced nitrate in upland waters of Great Britain indicated by stable isotopes

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Abstract

Atmospheric deposition of nitrogen (N) compounds is the major source of anthropogenic N to most upland ecosystems, where leaching of nitrate (NO3-) into surface waters contributes to eutrophication and acidification as well as indicating an excess of N in the terrestrial catchment ecosystems. Natural abundance stable isotopes ratios, 15N/14N and 18O/16O (the "dual isotope" technique) have previously been used in biogeochemical studies of alpine and forested ecosystems to demonstrate that most of the NO3- in upland surface waters has been microbially produced. Here we present an application of the technique to four moorland catchments in the British uplands including a comparison of lakes and their stream inflows at two sites. The NO3- concentrations of bulk deposition and surface waters at three sites are very similar. While noting the constraints imposed by uncertainty in the precise δ18O value for microbial NO3-, however, we estimate that 79-98% of the annual mean NO3- has been microbially produced. Direct leaching of atmospheric NO3- is a minor component of catchment NO3- export, although greater than in many similar studies in forested watersheds. A greater proportion of atmospheric NO3- is seen in the two lake sites relative to their inflow streams, demonstrating the importance of direct NO3- deposition to lake surfaces in catchments where terrestrial ecosystems intercept a large proportion of deposited N. The dominance of microbial sources of NO3- in upland waters suggests that reduced and oxidised N deposition may have similar implications in terms of contributing to NO3- leaching. © 2011 Springer Science+Business Media B.V.

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Curtis, C. J., Heaton, T. H. E., Simpson, G. L., Evans, C. D., Shilland, J., & Turner, S. (2012). Dominance of biologically produced nitrate in upland waters of Great Britain indicated by stable isotopes. Biogeochemistry, 111(1–3), 535–554. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10533-011-9686-8

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