Dual nutrient strategy vital to improve aquatic ecosystems
May 19th, 2009 - 2:57 pm ICT by ANI ( Leave a comment )Washington, May 19 (ANI): A scientist has stressed on the need for a dual nutrient strategy to improve aquatic ecosystems.
Excess phosphorus and nitrogen produced by human activities on neighboring land is making its way into coastal waters and degrading both water quality and aquatic life.
Although historically the priority has been to control phosphorus, Professor Hans Paerl, from the University of North Carolina in the US, argues that nitrogen imbalance is equally damaging.
According to Professor Paerl, a dual nutrient strategy, which tackles both phosphorus and nitrogen surplus, is necessary to manage effectively this nutrient over-enrichment and resulting habitat degradation of coastal waters in the long-term.
The combination of human population growth, urbanization, and agricultural and industrial expansion is causing unprecedented and alarming rates of nutrient over-enrichment and accelerated plant growth in receiving waters worldwide.
The increasing levels of nitrogen and phosphorus are of particular concern because an excess of these two nutrients promotes accelerated production of plant-based organic matter (or eutrophication) to the extent that excessive production, including harmful algal blooms, contributes to the expansion of marine ‘dead zones’ and leads to the destruction of fisheries habitat.
The negative consequences of eutrophication have been apparent in freshwater habitats for a long time and phosphorus has been identified as the key nutrient responsible.
While freshwater lakes have, over the past few decades, received continual doses of phosphorus, many coastal systems have experienced ever-increasing nitrogen loads from rapidly growing human sources, with severe negative impacts on ecosystem structure and function.
This has led to the need for nitrogen control measures.
Professor Paerl shows that the argument for reducing surplus phosphorus alone, to control eutrophication, is idealized and conceptually and technically inapplicable to many freshwater and marine ecosystems.
He added that focusing on phosphorus alone ignores the fact that natural and human influences that affect upstream waters have significant adverse consequences on downstream waters.
Therefore, it is essential to look at nutrient control measures and their effects across the entire freshwater to marine continuum, not each one in isolation.
According to Professor Paerl, “The dual nutrient approach represents an evolutionary step in arresting eutrophication, with consideration of the larger scale freshwater-marine continuum being the driving force.” (ANI)
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Tags: alarming rates, coastal systems, coastal waters, eutrophication, excess phosphorus, excessive production, freshwater habitats, freshwater lakes, habitat degradation, harmful algal blooms, human population growth, human sources, industrial expansion, negative consequences, nitrogen and phosphorus, nitrogen control, nitrogen loads, nutrient strategy, paerl, university of north carolina