Nutrient fuxes from an Arctic seabird colony to the adjacent coastal marine ecosystem
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https://hdl.handle.net/10037/24502Date
2022-02-22Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Abstract
Seabirds are important vectors for nutrient transfer across ecosystem boundaries. In this seasonal study, we evaluate the
impact of an Arctic colony (Alkhornet, Svalbard) of Black-legged Kittiwakes (Rissa tridactyla) and Brünnich’s Guillemots
(Uria lomvia) on stream nutrient concentrations and fuxes, as well as utilization by coastal biota. Water samples from
seabird-impacted and control streams were collected regularly throughout the melt season (June–September) for nutrient and
organic carbon analysis. Stable carbon and nitrogen isotope analysis (δ13C and δ15N) was used to assess whether seabirdderived nitrogen (N) could be traced into flamentous stream algae and marine algae as well as consumers (amphipods).
Concentrations of nitrate (NO3
−) and nitrite (NO2
−) peaked in July at 9200 µg N L−1 in seabird-impacted streams, 70 times
higher than for control streams. Mean concentrations of phosphate (PO4
3−) in seabird-impacted streams were 21.9 µg P L−1,
tenfold higher than in controls. Areal fuxes from seabird-impacted study catchments of NO3
− + NO2
− and PO4
3− had estimated ranges of 400–2100 kg N km−2 and 15–70 kg P km−2, respectively. Higher δ15N was found in all biota collected from
seabird-impacted sites, indicating utilization of seabird-derived nitrogen. Acrosiphonia sp. from seabird-impacted sites had
higher δ15N values (20–23‰ vs. 3–6‰) and lower C:N ratios (10.9 vs. 14.3) than specimens collected from control sites,
indicating reliance on seabird-derived nitrogen sources and potentially higher N-availability at seabird-impacted nearshore
sites. Our study demonstrates how marine nutrients brought onshore by seabirds also can return to the ocean and be utilized
by nearshore primary producers and consumers.
Publisher
SpringerCitation
Finne EA, Varpe Ø, Durant JM, Gabrielsen GW, Poste A. Nutrient fuxes from an Arctic seabird colony to the adjacent coastal marine ecosystem. Polar Biology. 2022Metadata
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