Nature Communications (Jan 2024)

Consistent stoichiometric long-term relationships between nutrients and chlorophyll-a across shallow lakes

  • Daniel Graeber,
  • Mark J. McCarthy,
  • Tom Shatwell,
  • Dietrich Borchardt,
  • Erik Jeppesen,
  • Martin Søndergaard,
  • Torben L. Lauridsen,
  • Thomas A. Davidson

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-024-45115-3
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15, no. 1
pp. 1 – 9

Abstract

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Abstract Aquatic ecosystems are threatened by eutrophication from nutrient pollution. In lakes, eutrophication causes a plethora of deleterious effects, such as harmful algal blooms, fish kills and increased methane emissions. However, lake-specific responses to nutrient changes are highly variable, complicating eutrophication management. These lake-specific responses could result from short-term stochastic drivers overshadowing lake-independent, long-term relationships between phytoplankton and nutrients. Here, we show that strong stoichiometric long-term relationships exist between nutrients and chlorophyll a (Chla) for 5-year simple moving averages (SMA, median R² = 0.87) along a gradient of total nitrogen to total phosphorus (TN:TP) ratios. These stoichiometric relationships are consistent across 159 shallow lakes (defined as average depth < 6 m) from a cross-continental, open-access database. We calculate 5-year SMA residuals to assess short-term variability and find substantial short-term Chla variation which is weakly related to nutrient concentrations (median R² = 0.12). With shallow lakes representing 89% of the world’s lakes, the identified stoichiometric long-term relationships can globally improve quantitative nutrient management in both lakes and their catchments through a nutrient-ratio-based strategy.