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Nitrogen Saturation in the Rocky Mountains
279
Citations
22
References
1996
Year
EutrophicationEngineeringGeomorphologyN SaturationEarth System ScienceEarth ScienceLimnologyNutrient StoichiometrySoil GasBiogeochemistryColorado Front RangeGeographyBiogeochemical CycleGeologyHydrologyNutrient CycleNitrogen SaturationGeochemistryMountain Uplift
Nitrogen saturation is occurring throughout high-elevation catchments of the Colorado Front Range. Annual inorganic N loading in wet deposition to the Front Range of ∼4 kg ha-1 yr-1 is about twice that of the Pacific States and similar to many sites in the northeastern United States. In the last ten years at Niwot Ridge/Green Lakes Valley and Glacier Lakes, annual minimum concentrations of NO3- in surface waters during the growing season have increased from below detection limits to ∼10 μequiv L-1, indicating that these two catchments are at the threshold of N saturation. The Loch Vale watershed is N saturated, with annual minimum concentrations of NO3- in surface waters generally above 10 μequiv L-1; annual volume-weighted mean (VWM) concentrations of 16 μequiv L-1 in surface waters are greater than that of ∼11 μequiv L-1 NO3- in wet deposition. At these high-elevation catchments, there has been a shift in ecosystem dynamics from an N-limited system to an N-saturated system as a result of anthropogenically fixed N in wetfall and dryfall. Results from the Western Lakes Survey component of the National Surface Water Survey show that N saturation is a regional problem in the Colorado Front Range, with many lakes having (NO3-) concentrations greater than 10 μequiv L-1. Foliar N:P ratios in bristlecone pine increase with elevation in the Colorado Front Range, indicating that at higher elevations P is translocated from foliar tissue more efficiently than N and that increasing atmospheric deposition of N with elevation is causing a change from N limitation to P limitation in the highest-elevation bristlecone pines. Current concepts of critical loads need to be reconsidered since only modest atmospheric loadings of N are sufficient to induce N leaching to surface waters in high-elevation catchments of the western United States.
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