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Contrasts among macrophyte riparian species in their use of stream water nitrate and ammonium: insights from 15N natural abundance
Authors:Marc Peipoch  Esperança Gacia  Alba Blesa  Miquel Ribot  Joan L Riera  Eugènia Martí
Institution:1. Integrative Freshwater Ecology Group, Centre d’Estudis Avan?ats de Blanes, Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Científicas (CEAB-CSIC), Accés a la Cala Sant Francesc 14, 17300, Blanes, Girona, Spain
2. Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Científicas. Center of Molecular Biology “Severo Ochoa”, Autonomous University of Madrid, C/Nicolás Cabrera 1, Campus de la Universidad Autónoma de Madrid, 28049, Madrid, Spain
3. Department of Ecology, University of Barcelona (UB), Diagonal 643, 08028, Barcelona, Spain
Abstract:We examined the relevance of dissolved inorganic nitrogen (DIN) forms (nitrate and ammonium) in stream water as N sources for different macrophyte species. To do this, we investigated the variability and relationships between 15N natural abundance of DIN forms and of four different macrophyte species in five different streams influenced by inputs from wastewater treatment plants and over time within one of these streams. Results showed that 15N signatures were similar in species of submersed and amphibious macrophytes and in stream water DIN, whereas 15N signatures of the riparian species were not. 15N signatures of macrophytes were generally closer to 15N signatures of nitrate, regardless of the species considered. Our results showed significant relationships between 15N signatures of DIN and those of submersed Callitriche stagnalis and amphibious Veronica beccabunga and Apium nodiflorum, suggesting stream water DIN as a relevant N source for these two functional groups. Moreover, results from a mixing model suggested that stream water DIN taken up by the submersed and amphibious species was mostly in the form of nitrate. Together, these results suggest different contribution to in-stream N uptake among the spatially-segregated species of macrophytes. While submersed and amphibious species can contribute to in-stream N uptake by assimilation of DIN, macrophyte species located at stream channel edges do not seem to rely on stream water DIN as an N source. Ultimately, these results add a functional dimension to the current use of macrophytes for the restoration of stream channel morphology, indicating that they can also contribute to reduce excess DIN in streams.
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