https://doi.org/10.25678/0003M5

Net Ecosystem Production

This study presents a novel concept for estimating net ecosystem production (NEP), the export of organic carbon (OC) from the productive surface layer to the deep-water (hypolimnion) of eleven seasonally stratified lakes, varying in depth and trophic state. As oxygen remineralizes settling OC at a constant ratio, NEP is equivalent to the areal hypolimnetic mineralization rate (AHM) plus burial in the sediment (net sedimentation, NS). Two major interferences have to be considered, however. First, OC from terrestrial sources, not originating from primary production, consumes a fraction of oxidants. Second, sediment diagenetic processes of lakes in trophic transition (e.g. undergoing eutrophication or reoligotrophication) that are not in quasi-steady-state with actual fluxes of OC in the productive surface layer, bias the estimation of NEP. In these cases, we suggest subtracting the flux of reduced substances diffusing from the sediment. This results in some overestimation for lakes with high allochthonous loads, and slight underestimation in lakes that are not in quasi-steady-state, because the fraction of the actual sediment burial of autochthonous OC is small but not negligible. The presented approach requires data from routinely available chemical monitoring and thus can be applied to historic data. The seasonal time integration makes the estimation of NEP quite robust. Exemplary, NEP of Lake Geneva was estimated from the export of P and N from the productive zone during the summer season to the hypolimnion assembling seasonal budgets. Based on a historic data record of 47 years, NEP estimations from AHM rates agreed well with P and N budgets and helped to verify and constrain the uncertainty of the estimates.

Dataset extent

Data and Resources

Citation

Steinsberger, T., Wüest, A., & Müller, B. (2021). Net Ecosystem Production (Version 1.0) [Data set]. Eawag: Swiss Federal Institute of Aquatic Science and Technology. https://doi.org/10.25678/0003M5

Metadata

Open Data Open Data
Long-term data Long-term data
Author
  • Steinsberger, Thomas
  • Wüest, Alfred
  • Müller, Beat
Keywords Organic carbon,oxygen depletion,primary production,phosphorus,nitrogen,gross sedimentation,sediment accumulation
Variables
  • areal_hypolimnetic_mineralization_rate
  • c_to_n_ratio
  • dissolved_oygen
  • net_ecosystem_production
  • total_nitrogen
  • total_phosphorus
Substances (generic terms)
  • nutrients
  • oxygen
Systems
  • lake
Timerange
  • 1966 TO 2019
Geographic Name(s)
  • Lake Baldegg
  • Lake Brienz
  • Lake Geneva
Review Level none
Curator Müller, Beat
Contact Beat.Mueller@eawag.ch
DOI 10.25678/0003M5