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New Zealand Journal of Marine and Freshwater Research abstracts


Lake eutrophication in New Zealand - a comparison with other countries of the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development

E. WHITE

Taupo Research Laboratory Division of Marine and Freshwater Science Department of Scientific and Industrial Research P.O. Box 415, Taupo, New Zealand

Abstract The findings of the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development Cooperative Programme on Eutrophication are largely inapplicable to lakes in New Zealand. This is because the relative distributions of nutrient nitrogen and phosphorus in New Zealand lakes and those of the OECD study are very different. The lim-nological feature central to the OECD findings is that phosphorus is the nutrient limiting algal growth, nutrient nitrogen usually being massively in excess of algal requirements. This is not true in New Zealand, where nitrogenous material in fresh waters is very much less abundant. In many lakes here the relative availability of nitrogen to phosphorus approximates that required for balanced algal growth, and in some, shortage of nitrogen limits growth. Water managers aiming to control eutrophication in New Zealand lakes are advised to use the OECD predictive equations with the utmost caution.

Keywords eutrophication; trophic status; New Zealand; lakes; OECD; phosphorus; nitrogen; chlorophylls; water transparency; inorganic nutrients; nitrates; nutrients; plant growth

New Zealand Journal of Marine and Freshwater Research, 1983, Vol. 17: 437-444 0028-8330/83/1704-0437$2.50/0 © Crown copyright 1983 Received 8 March 1983

PDF file of entire paper: medium quality (617K); (scanned from paper original: notes about this process)


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