EFFECT OF DANUBE RIVER DAM ON BLACK-SEA BIOGEOCHEMISTRY AND ECOSYSTEMSTRUCTURE

Citation
C. Humborg et al., EFFECT OF DANUBE RIVER DAM ON BLACK-SEA BIOGEOCHEMISTRY AND ECOSYSTEMSTRUCTURE, Nature, 386(6623), 1997, pp. 385-388
Citations number
30
Categorie Soggetti
Multidisciplinary Sciences
Journal title
NatureACNP
ISSN journal
00280836
Volume
386
Issue
6623
Year of publication
1997
Pages
385 - 388
Database
ISI
SICI code
0028-0836(1997)386:6623<385:EODRDO>2.0.ZU;2-Z
Abstract
Rivers contribute significantly to the pollution and eutrophication th at have caused drastic changes to the ecosystem of the Black Sea(1-3). Although damming is known to affect riverborne nutrient loads, and th us riverine ecosystems, evidence for significant effects in open coast al waters is sparse(4-6). Here we present long-term data sets of water and nutrient discharge from the River Danube to the Black Sea. These data reveal a reduction in the dissolved silicate load of the river by about two-thirds since dam constructions in the early 1970s. A concom itant decrease in wintertime dissolved silicate concentrations by more than 60% was observed in central Black Sea surface waters. The conseq uent changes in silicon to nitrogen ratio of the Black Sea nutrient lo ad appear to be larger than those caused by eutrophication alone, and seem to be responsible for dramatic shifts in phytoplankton species co mposition from diatoms (siliceous) to coccolithophores and flagellates (non-siliceous). Our results strongly suggest that the damming of the Danube has been instrumental in causing the observed changes in Black Sea surface waters(3,7-9), and that the large number of dams in opera tion around the world today could similarly affect the food web struct ure and biogeochemical cycling in coastal seas.