26 results on '"Myrstener, Maria"'
Search Results
2. Resolving the Drivers of Algal Nutrient Limitation from Boreal to Arctic Lakes and Streams
- Author
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Myrstener, Maria, Fork, Megan L., Bergström, Ann-Kristin, Puts, Isolde Callisto, Hauptmann, Demian, Isles, Peter D. F., Burrows, Ryan M., and Sponseller, Ryan A.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Experimental riparian forest gaps and increased sediment loads modify stream metabolic patterns and biofilm composition
- Author
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Myrstener, Maria, primary, Greenberg, Larry A., additional, and Kuglerová, Lenka, additional
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Experimental riparian forest gaps and increased sediment loads modify stream metabolic patterns and biofilm composition
- Author
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Myrstener, Maria, Greenberg, Larry, Kuglerová, Lenka, Myrstener, Maria, Greenberg, Larry, and Kuglerová, Lenka
- Abstract
Forest management operations greatly influence stream habitats. Canopy clearing and subsequent canopy development during succession, site preparation, and ditching alter the light environment, and increase sediment inputs and nutrient exports from upland and riparian soils to streams. These physicochemical changes affect aquatic biofilms and metabolic rates, and in this study, we tested their individual and combined effects. We used 12 artificial streamside channels, together with a field survey of nine streams in and around clear-cuts, to assess the effects of shading, substrate composition, and nutrient addition on biofilm biomass and composition, as well as metabolic rates. We found that biofilm biomass and gross primary production (GPP) were light limited in channels under 70% canopy shading. Nitrate additions at this shading level only marginally increased autotrophic biomass, while the rates of respiration increased 10-fold when carbon was added. Open (unshaded) channels had three times higher rates of GPP compared with channels with 70% shading, and autotrophic biomass was twice as high, largely caused by the colonization of filamentous green algae. These changes to biofilm biomass, composition, and GPP were caused by differences in light alone, as temperature was not affected by the shading treatment. Notably, higher rates of GPP led to no positive effect on net ecosystem production. Further, fine-grained substrates negatively affected GPP as compared with stone substrates in the experimental channels. In the surveyed streams, the negative effects of fine-grained substrates exceeded the positive influence of light on biofilm biomass. Altogether, our results highlight the need for riparian management that protects headwaters from unwanted stressors by focusing on preventing sediment erosion and carbon transport in clear-cuts, while providing variable shade conditions in second-growth forests.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Contrasting impacts of warming and browning on periphyton
- Author
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Callisto Puts, Isolde, Ask, Jenny, Myrstener, Maria, Bergström, Ann-Kristin, Callisto Puts, Isolde, Ask, Jenny, Myrstener, Maria, and Bergström, Ann-Kristin
- Abstract
We tested interactive effects of warming (+2°C) and browning on periphyton accrual and pigment composition when grown on a synthetic substrate (plastic strips) in the euphotic zone of 16 experimental ponds. We found that increased colored dissolved organic matter (cDOM) and associated nutrients alone, or in combination with warming, resulted in a substantially enhanced biomass accrual of periphyton, and a comparatively smaller increase in phytoplankton. This illustrates that periphyton is capable of using nutrients associated with cDOM, and by this may affect nutrient availability for phytoplankton. However, warming weakened the positive impact of browning on periphyton accrual, possibly by thermal compensation inferred from altered pigment composition, and/or changes in community composition. Our results illustrate multiple impacts of climate change on algal growth, which could have implications for productivity and consumer resource use, especially in shallow areas in northern lakes.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Contrasting impacts of warming and browning on periphyton
- Author
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Puts, Isolde Callisto, primary, Ask, Jenny, additional, Myrstener, Maria, additional, and Bergström, Ann‐Kristin, additional
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. Nitrogen supply and physical disturbance shapes Arctic stream nitrogen uptake through effects on metabolic activity
- Author
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Myrstener, Maria, primary, Thomas, Steven A., additional, Giesler, Reiner, additional, and Sponseller, Ryan A., additional
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. Nitrogen supply and physical disturbance shapes Arctic stream nitrogen uptake through effects on metabolic activity
- Author
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Myrstener, Maria, Thomas, Steven A., Giesler, Reiner, Sponseller, Ryan A., Myrstener, Maria, Thomas, Steven A., Giesler, Reiner, and Sponseller, Ryan A.
- Abstract
Climate change in the Arctic is altering the delivery of nutrients from terrestrial to aquatic ecosystems. The impact of these changes on downstream lakes and rivers is influenced by the capacity of small streams to retain such inputs. Given the potential for nutrient limitation in oligotrophic Arctic streams, biotic demand should be high, unless harsh environmental conditions maintain low biomass standing stocks that limit nutrient uptake capacity. We assessed the drivers of nutrient uptake in two contrasting headwater environments in Arctic Sweden: one stream draining upland tundra and the other draining an alluvial valley with birch forest. At both sites, we measured nitrate (NO3−) uptake biweekly using short-term slug releases and estimated rates of gross primary production (GPP) and ecosystem respiration from continuous dissolved oxygen measurements. Catchment characteristics were associated with distinct stream chemical and biological properties. For example, the tundra stream maintained relatively low NO3− concentrations (average: 46 µg N/L) and rates of GPP (0.2 g O2 m−2 day−1). By comparison, the birch forest stream was more NO3− rich (88 µg N/L) and productive (GPP: 1.7 g O2 m−2 day−1). These differences corresponded to greater areal NO3− uptake rate and increased NO3− use efficiency (as uptake velocity) in the birch forest stream (max 192 µg N m−2 min−1 and 96 mm/hr) compared to its tundra counterpart (max 52 µg N m−2 min−1 and 49 mm/hr) during 2017. Further, different sets of environmental drivers predicted temporal patterns of nutrient uptake at these sites: abiotic factors (e.g. NO3− concentration and discharge) were associated with changes in uptake in the tundra stream, while metabolic activity was more important in the birch forest stream. Between sites, variation in uptake metrics suggests that the ability to retain pulses of nutrients is linked to nutrient supply regimes controlled at larger spatial and temporal scales and habitat properties that, Originally included in thesis in manuscript form.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. Nutrients influence seasonal metabolic patterns and total productivity of Arctic streams
- Author
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Myrstener, Maria, Gómez-Gener, Lluís, Rocher-Ros, Gerard, Giesler, Reiner, Sponseller, Ryan A., Myrstener, Maria, Gómez-Gener, Lluís, Rocher-Ros, Gerard, Giesler, Reiner, and Sponseller, Ryan A.
- Abstract
The seasonality of gross primary production (GPP) in streams is driven by multiple physical and chemical factors, yet incident light is often thought to be most important. In Arctic tundra streams, however, light is available in saturating amounts throughout the summer, but sharp declines in nutrient supply during the terrestrial growing season may constrain aquatic productivity. Given the opposing seasonality of these drivers, we hypothesized that "shoulder seasons"-spring and autumn-represent critical time windows when light and nutrients align to optimize rates of stream productivity in the Arctic. To test this, we measured annual patterns of GPP and biofilm accumulation in eight streams in Arctic Sweden. We found that the aquatic growing season length differed by 4 months across streams and was determined largely by the timing of ice-off in spring. During the growing season, temporal variability in GPP for nitrogen (N) poor streams was correlated with inorganic N concentration, while in more N-rich streams GPP was instead linked to changes in phosphorus and light. Annual GPP varied ninefold among streams and was enhanced by N availability, the length of ice-free period, and low flood frequency. Finally, network scale estimates of GPP highlight the overall significance of the shoulder seasons, which accounted for 48% of annual productivity. We suggest that the timing of ice off and nutrient supply from land interact to regulate the annual metabolic regimes of nutrient poor, Arctic streams, leading to unexpected peaks in productivity that are offset from the terrestrial growing season.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. The role of nutrients for stream ecosystem function in Arctic landscapes : drivers of productivity under environmental change
- Author
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Myrstener, Maria
- Subjects
Arctic ,Algae ,Physical Geography ,Naturgeografi ,Nitrogen ,Biofilm ,Nutrient limitation ,Primary productivity ,Stream ,Phosphorus ,Nutrients ,Boreal - Abstract
Arctic and sub-Arctic freshwaters are currently experiencing substantial ecosystem changes due to the effects of global warming. Global warming effects on these freshwaters include increasing water temperatures, altered hydrological patterns, shifts in riparian vegetation and changes in the export of nutrients and carbon from soils. How these alterations to the physical and chemical hab-itat will affect stream ecosystem functioning largely depends on the responses by autotrophic pro-ducers and heterotrophic primary consumers. In this thesis, I explore how key stream ecosystem processes such as metabolic rates and nutrient cycling vary as a function of climate and landscape drivers, particularly light, temperature, and nutrient and carbon availability. To do this I leveraged natural gradients in vegetation, altitude, disturbance, and precipitation throughout the year in northern Sweden, as well as long- and short-term manipulations of nutrient availability. I also synthesized nutrient limitation data from lakes and streams to more holistically assess the re-sponses of boreal to Arctic freshwaters to changes in nutrients and climate variables. I found that nutrient availability, and especially nitrogen (N), is a main driver of spatial and temporal patterns of biofilm productivity, whole system metabolic rates, and short term N uptake in Arctic and sub-Arctic streams. I also show the importance of light and temperature constraints during early spring and late autumn, which set the limit for the aquatic growing season and annual productivity pat-terns. I present a first comparison of combined drivers of lake and stream responses to nutrient addition, which points to a shared importance of N and phosphorus (P) rather than light or tem-perature in driving the magnitude of nutrient limitation across these systems. Ultimately, I pro-pose that across large ranges in habitat variables, widespread nutrient limitation of Arctic fresh-waters constrain other climate change effects on ecosystem functions. The results presented in this thesis will promote better predictions of climate change effects on Boreal to Arctic stream ecosystem functioning.
- Published
- 2020
11. Stream metabolism controls diel patterns and evasion of CO2 in Arctic streams
- Author
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Rocher-Ros, Gerard, Sponseller, Ryan A., Bergström, Ann-Kristin, Myrstener, Maria, Giesler, Reiner, Rocher-Ros, Gerard, Sponseller, Ryan A., Bergström, Ann-Kristin, Myrstener, Maria, and Giesler, Reiner
- Abstract
Streams play an important role in the global carbon (C) cycle, accounting for a large portion of CO2 evaded from inland waters despite their small areal coverage. However, the relative importance of different terrestrial and aquatic processes driving CO2 production and evasion from streams remains poorly understood. In this study, we measured O-2 and CO2 continuously in streams draining tundra-dominated catchments in northern Sweden, during the summers of 2015 and 2016. From this, we estimated daily metabolic rates and CO2 evasion simultaneously and thus provide insight into the role of stream metabolism as a driver of C dynamics in Arctic streams. Our results show that aquatic biological processes regulate CO2 concentrations and evasion at multiple timescales. Photosynthesis caused CO2 concentrations to decrease by as much as 900 ppm during the day, with the magnitude of this diel variation being strongest at the low-turbulence streams. Diel patterns in CO2 concentrations in turn influenced evasion, with up to 45% higher rates at night. Throughout the summer, CO2 evasion was sustained by aquatic ecosystem respiration, which was one order of magnitude higher than gross primary production. Furthermore, in most cases, the contribution of stream respiration exceeded CO2 evasion, suggesting that some stream reaches serve as net sources of CO2, thus creating longitudinal heterogeneity in C production and loss within this stream network. Overall, our results provide the first link between stream metabolism and CO2 evasion in the Arctic and demonstrate that stream metabolic processes are key drivers of the transformation and fate of terrestrial organic matter exported from these landscapes., Originally included in thesis in manuscript form.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. Nutrients influence seasonal metabolic patterns and total productivity of Arctic streams
- Author
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Myrstener, Maria, primary, Gómez‐Gener, Lluís, additional, Rocher‐Ros, Gerard, additional, Giesler, Reiner, additional, and Sponseller, Ryan A., additional
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. Urban Algae - Ecological Status and the Perception of Ecosystem Services of Urban Ponds
- Author
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Herrero, Sonia, Stratmann, Cleo, Stephan, Susanne, Velthuis, Mandy, Kaiser, Nina, Podschun, Simone A., B. M. Carreira, Angona, Carmen Espinosa, Meritxell Abril, Alirangues, Marta, Amadori, Marina, Anca-Mihaela Șuteu, Arias-Real, Rebeca, Arranz, Ignasi, Bercea, Silviu, Bodmer, Pascal, Borrego-Ramos, María, Burgazzi, Gemma, Cabrerizo, Marco J., Castro-López, Daniel, Chmist-Sikorska, Joanna, Lozano, Miriam Colls, Dinu, Valentin, Enache, Ioana, Ersoy, Zeynep, Estevez, Edurne, Fork, Megan, Freeman, Anna, Frenken, Thijs, Georgieva, Galia, Lluís Gómez-Gener, González-Ferreras, Alexia María, González-Trujillo, Juan David, Granados, Veronica, Grujčić, Vesna, Hinegk, Luigi, Tsvetelina Isheva, Jiménez, Laura, Kajan, Katarina, Király, Edit, Klaus, Marcus, Kochalski, Sophia, Kókai, Zsuzsanna, Kulaš, Antonija, Kust, Andreja, Lengyel, Edina, Mazacotte, Gregorio Alejandro López Moreira, Lukács, Áron, Lumpi, Theresa, Miralles-Lorenzo, Javier, Montes, Jorge, Morant, Daniel, Moreno-Linares, Emilio, Morini, Giuliano, Moza Maria Iasmina, Maíra Mucci, Münzner, Karla, Musseau, Camille, Myrstener, Maria, Nagler, Magdalena, Nava, Veronica, Nderjaku, Sara, Ndoj, Eriselda, Niedrist, Georg H., Nilsson, Jenny, Darmina Nita, Olenici, Adriana, Palmia, Beatrice, Palou, Albert, Patelli, Martina, Pérez-Silos, Ignacio, Puche, Eric, Renes, Sophia, Rimcheska Biljana, Rocher-Ros, Gerard, Rodríguez-Castillo, Tamara, Rodríguez-Lozano, Pablo, Sagouis, Alban, Salvadore, Andrea, Pedro, Raquel Sánchez De, Klea Selimollari, Selmeczy, Géza, Severini, Edoardo, Sgarzi, Serena, Kavagutti, Vinicius, Stambolski, Vladimir, Stammnitz, Max, Stoianova, Desislava, Subeva, Monika, Szałkiewicz, Ewelina, Santos, Sara Turiel, Urban, Lara H, Máté Vass, Vázquez, Víctor, Viza, Aida, Aitziber Zufiaurre, and Evtimova, Vesela
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. Stream metabolism controls diel patterns and evasion of CO2 in Arctic streams
- Author
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Rocher‐Ros, Gerard, primary, Sponseller, Ryan A., additional, Bergström, Ann‐Kristin, additional, Myrstener, Maria, additional, and Giesler, Reiner, additional
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
15. Persistent nitrogen limitation of stream biofilm communitiesalong climate gradients in the Arctic
- Author
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Myrstener, Maria, Rocher-Ros, Gerard, Burrows, Ryan M., Bergström, Ann-Kristin, Giesler, Reiner, Sponseller, Ryan A., Myrstener, Maria, Rocher-Ros, Gerard, Burrows, Ryan M., Bergström, Ann-Kristin, Giesler, Reiner, and Sponseller, Ryan A.
- Abstract
Climate change is rapidly reshaping Arctic landscapes through shifts in vegetation cover and productivity, soil resource mobilization, and hydrological regimes. The implications of these changes for stream ecosystems and food webs is unclear and will depend largely on microbial biofilm responses to concurrent shifts in temperature, light, and resource supply from land. To study those responses, we used nutrient diffusing substrates to manipulate resource supply to biofilm communities along regional gradients in stream temperature, riparian shading, and dissolved organic carbon (DOC) loading in Arctic Sweden. We found strong nitrogen (N) limitation across this gradient for gross primary production, community respiration and chlorophyll‐a accumulation. For unamended biofilms, activity and biomass accrual were not closely related to any single physical or chemical driver across this region. However, the magnitude of biofilm response to N addition was: in tundra streams, biofilm response was constrained by thermal regimes, whereas variation in light availability regulated this response in birch and coniferous forest streams. Furthermore, heterotrophic responses to experimental N addition increased across the region with greater stream water concentrations of DOC relative to inorganic N. Thus, future shifts in resource supply to these ecosystems are likely to interact with other concurrent environmental changes to regulate stream productivity. Indeed, our results suggest that in the absence of increased nutrient inputs, Arctic streams will be less sensitive to future changes in other habitat variables such as temperature and DOC loading.
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
16. Stream metabolism controls diel patterns and evasion of CO2 in Arctic streams.
- Author
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Rocher‐Ros, Gerard, Sponseller, Ryan A., Bergström, Ann‐Kristin, Myrstener, Maria, and Giesler, Reiner
- Subjects
METABOLIC regulation ,RIVERS ,RESPIRATION ,TUNDRAS ,CARBON cycle - Abstract
Streams play an important role in the global carbon (C) cycle, accounting for a large portion of CO2 evaded from inland waters despite their small areal coverage. However, the relative importance of different terrestrial and aquatic processes driving CO2 production and evasion from streams remains poorly understood. In this study, we measured O2 and CO2 continuously in streams draining tundra‐dominated catchments in northern Sweden, during the summers of 2015 and 2016. From this, we estimated daily metabolic rates and CO2 evasion simultaneously and thus provide insight into the role of stream metabolism as a driver of C dynamics in Arctic streams. Our results show that aquatic biological processes regulate CO2 concentrations and evasion at multiple timescales. Photosynthesis caused CO2 concentrations to decrease by as much as 900 ppm during the day, with the magnitude of this diel variation being strongest at the low‐turbulence streams. Diel patterns in CO2 concentrations in turn influenced evasion, with up to 45% higher rates at night. Throughout the summer, CO2 evasion was sustained by aquatic ecosystem respiration, which was one order of magnitude higher than gross primary production. Furthermore, in most cases, the contribution of stream respiration exceeded CO2 evasion, suggesting that some stream reaches serve as net sources of CO2, thus creating longitudinal heterogeneity in C production and loss within this stream network. Overall, our results provide the first link between stream metabolism and CO2 evasion in the Arctic and demonstrate that stream metabolic processes are key drivers of the transformation and fate of terrestrial organic matter exported from these landscapes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
17. Persistent nitrogen limitation of stream biofilm communities along climate gradients in the Arctic
- Author
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Myrstener, Maria, primary, Rocher-Ros, Gerard, additional, Burrows, Ryan M., additional, Bergström, Ann-Kristin, additional, Giesler, Reiner, additional, and Sponseller, Ryan A., additional
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. Disentangling denitrification and its environmental drivers in northern boreal lakes
- Author
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Myrstener, Maria
- Subjects
N2O production ,Denitrification ,boreal lakes ,acetylene inhibition technique - Abstract
Dinitrous oxide (N2O) is a potent greenhouse gas some 354 times stronger than carbon dioxide (CO2) in the atmosphere. Recent studies show that lake denitrification contributes to a considerable part of the global N2O emissions. Despite this, lake-N2O emissions are not being accounted for in global greenhouse gas modeling because it has not yet been accurately understood and quantified. The aim of this study was to assess how denitrification varies between and within boreal lakes and how it is controlled by nitrate- (NO3) and carbon (C) availability and temperature. Studies on denitrification were performed using the acetylene inhibition technique on sediments from three lakes in northern Sweden (February to August, 2014). Results showed that denitrification was correlated (linear regression, r2=0.71) with NO3 concentrations in the hypolimnion water at ambient conditions and that additions of NO3 up to a concentration of 50 µg NO3-N L-1 increased denitrification. Temperature increased denitrification in all lakes, at all sites except in one lake in July, when nutrient concentrations were at its lowest. The spatial and temporal variation in denitrification was small at ambient conditions (1-3 µmol N2O m-2 h-1)but the variation in the response to nutrient additions and temperature increase was very high. This was in part attributed to differences in dissolved organic C (DOC). These findings have important implications for future denitrification research and how lake-N2O production is included in greenhouse gas modeling and contributes to our knowledge on how northern boreal lakes may respond to enhanced nutrient loadings and global warming.
- Published
- 2015
19. The effects of temperature and resource availability on denitrification and relative N2O production in boreal lake sediments
- Author
-
Myrstener, Maria, Jonsson, Anders, Bergström, Ann-Kristin, Myrstener, Maria, Jonsson, Anders, and Bergström, Ann-Kristin
- Abstract
Anthropogenic environmental stressors (like atmospheric deposition, land use change, and climate warming) are predicted to increase inorganic nitrogen and organic carbon loading to northern boreal lakes, with potential consequences for denitrification in lakes. However, our ability to predict effects of these changes is currently limited as northern boreal lakes have been largely neglected in denitrification studies. The aim of this study was therefore to assess how maximum potential denitrification and N2O production rates, and the relationship between the two (relative N2O production), is controlled by availability of nitrate (NO3−), carbon (C), phosphorus (P), and temperature. Experiments were performed using the acetylene inhibition technique on sediments from a small, nutrient poor boreal lake in northern Sweden in 2014. Maximum potential denitrification and N2O production rates at 4°C were reached already at NO3− additions of 106–120 μg NO3−–N/L, and remained unchanged with higher NO3 amendments. Higher incubation temperatures increased maximum potential denitrification and N2O production rates, and Q10 was somewhat higher for N2O production (1.77) than for denitrification (1.69). The relative N2O production ranged between 13% and 64%, and was not related to NO3− concentration, but the ratio increased when incubations were amended with C and P (from a median of 16% to 27%). Combined, our results suggests that unproductive northern boreal lakes currently have low potential for denitrification but are susceptible to small changes in NO3 loading especially if these are accompanied by enhanced C and P availability, likely promoting higher N2O production relative to N2.
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. The effects of temperature and resource availability on denitrification and relative N 2 O production in boreal lake sediments
- Author
-
Myrstener, Maria, primary, Jonsson, Anders, additional, and Bergström, Ann-Kristin, additional
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. Konduktivitet i vattendrag som indikator på sura sulfatjordar
- Author
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Myrstener, Maria
- Subjects
Conductivity ,Physical Geography ,Naturgeografi ,Acid sulphate soils ,Water chemistry ,Annan geovetenskap och miljövetenskap ,Stream water ,Other Earth and Related Environmental Sciences - Abstract
Increasing attention is being given to acid sulphate soils wherever they occur. The problems that leaching sulphate soils gives with significant lowerings of pH and mobilization of heavy metals influence large spectra of our society from fisheries to agriculture to construction. Mapping these soils is consequently of great importance and the methods of doing this is very much lacking in function and precision. This study was therefore carried out to investigate whether conductivity in running water can be used as a simple instrument to identify acid sulphate soils in the catchment. 31 coastal streams in the county of Västerbotten were analyzed for different catchment properties such as occurence of marine sediments and basic water chemistry including conductivity and sulphate. Sulphate proved to be the dominant factor controling conductivity in most streams, constituting up to 90 % of the anions. The results also showed that the concentrations of sulphate correlated to 67 % with marine sediments in the catchment. Where conductivity values exceeded 90 µS/cm the influence of acid sulphate soils could be determined for certain. The major conclusion drawn from this study is that high conductivity values serves as a reliable indicator of leaching acid sulphate soils whereas lower values can not exclude them. flisik
- Published
- 2012
22. CONDUCTIVITY IN RUNNING WATERS AS A METHOD OF IDENTIFYING ACID SULPHATE SOILS
- Author
-
Myrstener, Maria
- Subjects
Conductivity ,Physical Geography ,Naturgeografi ,Acid sulphate soils ,Water chemistry ,Annan geovetenskap och miljövetenskap ,Stream water ,Other Earth and Related Environmental Sciences - Abstract
Increasing attention is being given to acid sulphate soils wherever they occur. The problems that leaching sulphate soils gives with significant lowerings of pH and mobilization of heavy metals influence large spectra of our society from fisheries to agriculture to construction. Mapping these soils is consequently of great importance and the methods of doing this is very much lacking in function and precision. This study was therefore carried out to investigate whether conductivity in running water can be used as a simple instrument to identify acid sulphate soils in the catchment. 31 coastal streams in the county of Västerbotten were analyzed for different catchment properties such as occurence of marine sediments and basic water chemistry including conductivity and sulphate. Sulphate proved to be the dominant factor controling conductivity in most streams, constituting up to 90 % of the anions. The results also showed that the concentrations of sulphate correlated to 67 % with marine sediments in the catchment. Where conductivity values exceeded 90 µS/cm the influence of acid sulphate soils could be determined for certain. The major conclusion drawn from this study is that high conductivity values serves as a reliable indicator of leaching acid sulphate soils whereas lower values can not exclude them. flisik
- Published
- 2012
23. Resolving the drivers of aquatic nutrient limitation along boreal to Arctic climate gradients
- Author
-
Myrstener, Maria, Fork, Megan L., Callisto Puts, Isolde, Hauptmann, Demian, Bergström, Ann-Kristin, Sponseller, Ryan A., Myrstener, Maria, Fork, Megan L., Callisto Puts, Isolde, Hauptmann, Demian, Bergström, Ann-Kristin, and Sponseller, Ryan A.
24. Contrasting impacts of warming and browning on periphyton
- Author
-
Puts, Isolde C., Ask, Jenny, Myrstener, Maria, Bergström, Ann-Kristin, Puts, Isolde C., Ask, Jenny, Myrstener, Maria, and Bergström, Ann-Kristin
25. Stream metabolism controls diel patterns and evasion of CO 2 in Arctic streams.
- Author
-
Rocher-Ros G, Sponseller RA, Bergström AK, Myrstener M, and Giesler R
- Subjects
- Arctic Regions, Carbon Dioxide, Sweden, Ecosystem, Rivers
- Abstract
Streams play an important role in the global carbon (C) cycle, accounting for a large portion of CO
2 evaded from inland waters despite their small areal coverage. However, the relative importance of different terrestrial and aquatic processes driving CO2 production and evasion from streams remains poorly understood. In this study, we measured O2 and CO2 continuously in streams draining tundra-dominated catchments in northern Sweden, during the summers of 2015 and 2016. From this, we estimated daily metabolic rates and CO2 evasion simultaneously and thus provide insight into the role of stream metabolism as a driver of C dynamics in Arctic streams. Our results show that aquatic biological processes regulate CO2 concentrations and evasion at multiple timescales. Photosynthesis caused CO2 concentrations to decrease by as much as 900 ppm during the day, with the magnitude of this diel variation being strongest at the low-turbulence streams. Diel patterns in CO2 concentrations in turn influenced evasion, with up to 45% higher rates at night. Throughout the summer, CO2 evasion was sustained by aquatic ecosystem respiration, which was one order of magnitude higher than gross primary production. Furthermore, in most cases, the contribution of stream respiration exceeded CO2 evasion, suggesting that some stream reaches serve as net sources of CO2 , thus creating longitudinal heterogeneity in C production and loss within this stream network. Overall, our results provide the first link between stream metabolism and CO2 evasion in the Arctic and demonstrate that stream metabolic processes are key drivers of the transformation and fate of terrestrial organic matter exported from these landscapes., (© 2019 The Authors. Global Change Biology published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. The effects of temperature and resource availability on denitrification and relative N2O production in boreal lake sediments.
- Author
-
Myrstener M, Jonsson A, and Bergström AK
- Subjects
- Denitrification, Temperature, Environmental Monitoring, Geologic Sediments chemistry, Lakes chemistry, Nitrogen Dioxide analysis, Water Pollutants, Chemical analysis
- Abstract
Anthropogenic environmental stressors (like atmospheric deposition, land use change, and climate warming) are predicted to increase inorganic nitrogen and organic carbon loading to northern boreal lakes, with potential consequences for denitrification in lakes. However, our ability to predict effects of these changes is currently limited as northern boreal lakes have been largely neglected in denitrification studies. The aim of this study was therefore to assess how maximum potential denitrification and N2O production rates, and the relationship between the two (relative N2O production), is controlled by availability of nitrate (NO3(-)), carbon (C), phosphorus (P), and temperature. Experiments were performed using the acetylene inhibition technique on sediments from a small, nutrient poor boreal lake in northern Sweden in 2014. Maximum potential denitrification and N2O production rates at 4°C were reached already at NO3(-) additions of 106-120μg NO3(-)-N/L, and remained unchanged with higher NO3 amendments. Higher incubation temperatures increased maximum potential denitrification and N2O production rates, and Q10 was somewhat higher for N2O production (1.77) than for denitrification (1.69). The relative N2O production ranged between 13% and 64%, and was not related to NO3(-) concentration, but the ratio increased when incubations were amended with C and P (from a median of 16% to 27%). Combined, our results suggests that unproductive northern boreal lakes currently have low potential for denitrification but are susceptible to small changes in NO3 loading especially if these are accompanied by enhanced C and P availability, likely promoting higher N2O production relative to N2., (Copyright © 2016. Published by Elsevier B.V.)
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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