soluble reactive phosphorus

Stream networks are intimately connected to the landscapes through which they flow and significantly transform nutrients and organic matter that are in transport from landscapes to oceans. This work will quantify the relative influences of throughflow, lateral inputs, and hyporheic (a layer of surface sediments that contains water which exchanges continuously with water in the open channel) regeneration on the seasonal fluxes of C, N, and P in an arctic river network, and determine how these influences will shift under seasonal conditions that are likely to be substantially different in the future. This objective is a logical extension of earlier. This work will focus on seasonal dynamics at different river reach scales (1st to 4th order streams) and will lay the groundwork for a whole river network model to integrate the influences of throughflow, lateral inputs, hyporheic regeneration, and in-stream metabolism on C, N, and P fluxes through an entire river network.

For more information see project's web site:  Changing Seasonality and Arctic Stream Networks

Changing Seasonality and Arctic Stream Networks
Abstract
William "Breck" Bowden, 2013 CSASN Channel Nutrients from 2010 to 2012 in I8 Inlet, I8 Outlet, Peat Inlet and Kuparuk Rivers. 10.6073/pasta/d19adb5a8fe01f67806e5afccf283b52
The Changing Seasonality of Arctic Stream Systems (CSASN) was active from 2010 to 2012. The CSASN goal was to quantify the relative influences of through flow, lateral inputs, and hyporheic regeneration on the seasonal fluxes C, N, and P in an arctic river network, and to determine how these influences might shift under seasonal conditions that are likely to be substantially different in the future. During the project, background samples were collected from four stream channels and analyzed for a variety of nutrients.
root_dynamics data
Abstract
George Kling, Knute Nadelhoffer, Martin Sommerkorn, 2006 Phosphate and ammonium from experiemental plots near Toolik Lake, AK from 2004. 10.6073/pasta/43c22e376bf2074e3218927fb2a4124d
Soluble reactive phosphorus (SRP) and ammonium in waters from tussock tundra and wet sedge plots near Toolik Lake, AK during the summer of 2004.
George Kling, Knute Nadelhoffer, Martin Sommerkorn, 2008 Phosphate and ammonium from experiemental plots near Toolik Lake, AK from 2006. 10.6073/pasta/6f555b30d308ea7ae1752e498d09788a
Soluble reactive phosphorus (SRP) and ammonium in waters from tussock tundra and wet sedge plots near Toolik Lake, AK during the summer of 2006.
George Kling, Knute Nadelhoffer, Martin Sommerkorn, 2005 Phosphate and ammonium from experiemental plots near Toolik Lake, AK from 2003. 10.6073/pasta/cffd6791e79e10709328dcadde388315
Soluble reactive phosphorus (SRP) and ammonium in waters from tussock tundra and wet sedge plots near Toolik Lake, AK during the summer of 2003.
George Kling, Knute Nadelhoffer, Martin Sommerkorn, 2007 Dissolved organic carbon, phosphate, and ammonium from experiemental plots near Toolik Lake, AK from 2005. 10.6073/pasta/b66f19f933dcc53f6b4a27f481aed665
Dissolved organic carbon, SRP, and ammonium in waters from tussock tundra and wet sedge plots near Toolik Lake, AK during the summer of 2005

.
Streams Chemistry
Abstract
William "Breck" Bowden, 2020 Arctic LTER Streams Chemistry Toolik Field Station, Alaska 1978 to 2019.. 10.6073/pasta/3faacd18b63b3bacc5a0dbd6f09660e1
Since 1983, the Streams Project at the Toolik Field Station has monitored physical, chemical, and biological parameters in a 5-km, fourth-order reach of the Kuparuk River near its intersection with the Dalton Highway and the Trans-Alaska Pipeline. In 1989, similar studies were begun on a 3.5-km, third-order reach of a second stream, Oksrukuyik Creek.
CSV
Subscribe to soluble reactive phosphorus