Effects of oxygen concentration on phosphorus release from reflooded air-dried wetland sediments
S Qiu and AJ McComb
Australian Journal of Marine and Freshwater Research 45(7) 1319 - 1328
Abstract Intact sediment cores from North Lake (Perth, Western Australia) were air-dried for 40 days, reflooded with
lake water and incubated at 20°C. Under aerated conditions, air-drying increased phosphorus release. When
aeration was stopped, air-dried sediments continued to release P into the water, but the rate was much
slower than that in the early stage of the aeration. The results suggest a gradual depletion of labile
phosphorus from the dried sediments. Under anaerobic conditions, the phosphate release was also markedly
higher for air-dried sediments than for the 'wet' controls. The accumulation of soluble inorganic
phosphorus during air-drying, owing to breakdown of organic material and a drying-induced decrease in
phosphate sorption, may be the cause of release on rewetting. The results suggest that drought-induced
sediment dehydration in natural wetlands may be followed by a significant increase of internal phosphorus
loading under both aerobic and anaerobic conditions. Care must therefore be taken in using drawdown as a
lake management technique to improve water quality.
Keywords: drawdown, phosphorus release, sediment, drying, wetland
Full text doi:10.1071/MF9941319
© CSIRO 1994





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