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Corrigendum to: Constraining nitrogen sources to a seagrass-dominated coastal embayment by using an isotope mass balance approach

Authors :
Douglas G. Russell
Adam J. Kessler
Wei Wen Wong
Dick Van Oevelen
Perran L. M. Cook
Source :
Marine and Freshwater Research. 73:718-718
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
CSIRO Publishing, 2022.

Abstract

Nitrogen (N) is often the key nutrient limiting primary production in coastal waters. Quantifying sources and sinks of N is therefore critical to understanding the factors that underpin the productivity of coastal ecosystems. Constraining nitrogen inputs can be difficult for some terms such as N fixation and marine exchange as a consequence of uncertainties associated with scaling and stochasticity. To help overcome these issues, we undertook a N budget incorporating an isotope and mass balance to constrain N sources in a large oligotrophic coastal embayment (Western Port, Australia). The total N input to Western Port was calculated to be 1400Mg Nyear−1, which is remarkably consistent with previous estimates of sedimentation rates within the system. Catchment inputs, N fixation, marine sources and atmospheric deposition comprised 44, 28, 28 and 13% of N inputs respectively. Retention of marine-derived N equated to ~3 and ~10% of total N and NOx flushed through the system from the marine end-member. The relatively high contribution of N fixation compared with previous studies was most likely to be due to the high proportion of nutrient-limited intertidal sediments where N is mediated by seagrasses and sediment cyanobacteria.

Details

ISSN :
14486059 and 13231650
Volume :
73
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Marine and Freshwater Research
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........be5f65bef3c161a5844614028c8156e2