FORMS AND AVAILABILITY OF SEDIMENT PHOSPHORUS IN CARBONATE SAND OF BERMUDA SEAGRASS BEDS

Citation
Hs. Jensen et al., FORMS AND AVAILABILITY OF SEDIMENT PHOSPHORUS IN CARBONATE SAND OF BERMUDA SEAGRASS BEDS, Limnology and oceanography, 43(5), 1998, pp. 799-810
Citations number
46
Categorie Soggetti
Oceanografhy,Limnology
Journal title
ISSN journal
00243590
Volume
43
Issue
5
Year of publication
1998
Pages
799 - 810
Database
ISI
SICI code
0024-3590(1998)43:5<799:FAAOSP>2.0.ZU;2-Q
Abstract
Primary production by seagrasses in tropical and subtropical carbonate sediments often appears to be phosphorus (P) limited, and several stu dies have sought to identify the possible sources of P for long-term g rowth. Here, we quantify concentrations of particulate and dissolved P and fluoride (F-) in carbonate sediments, sediment-water P exchange, and leaf-tissue P concentrations in three seagrass beds in Bermuda. We also present data on the sequential extraction of P and F- from the s ediments at each site. Total sediment P (TPsed) in the upper 20 cm ran ged from 650 to 1,250 mmol P m(-2) and was some 500-fold larger than t he pool of P dissolved in pore waters. Loosely adsorbed inorganic P co mprised 2% of TPsed, while a surface-bound inorganic P pool extracted by dithionite buffer constituted 15-20%. Most of the remaining P and n early all of the Ca and F- present in the sediment was recovered when the remaing sediment was dissolved in an acetic acid buffer solution. This pool includes calcium-fluoroapatite (CFA), which is considered th e primary diagenetic sink for P in carbonate sands. Dissolved inorgani c P and F- were both elevated in the rhizosphere pore waters from the three seagrass beds. In combination with our analysis of sediments by sequential extraction, this result indicates that the carbonate matrix of the sediment is being dissolved in the rhizosphere, with a resulti ng release of P to the pore water and hence to the seagrass roots. We suggest that this is important in the P economy of these subtropical s eagrass (Thalassia testudinum) beds and note that the carbonate-bound P pool is large enough to sustain seagrass P requirements for decades. Nonetheless, primary production in such seagrass systems can remain P limited if the rate of P release from sediment dissolution is too slo w to support maximum seagrass growth rates. Analysis of seagrass leaf tissues revealed that P availability was highest at the site with the highest anthropogenic influences. This site was also characterized by the highest sediment P release, indicating that high P availability ma y also be partly due to higher release of P as sediments are dissolved . Phosphorus was released from the sediment mainly as dissolved organi c P, causing a net efflux of dissolved P at all sites in April and at two sites in August.