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clean and clear
Phosphorus
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Phosphorus is an essential nutrient for the
plants and animals that make up the aquatic food web. Since
phosphorus is the nutrient in shortest supply in most fresh
waters, even a modest increase in phosphorus can, under the
right conditions, set off a whole chain of undesirable events
in a lake or river, including accelerated plant growth, algae
blooms, low dissolved oxygen, and the death of certain fish,
invertebrates, and other aquatic animals.
Forms of Phosphorus
Phosphorus has a complicated
story. Pure, "elemental" phosphorus
(P) is rare. In nature, phosphorus is usually on friendly
terms with four oxygen atoms in a relationship known as a
phosphate molecule
(PO4-3).
Phosphorus in aquatic systems occurs as organic phosphate and inorganic
phosphate. Organic phosphate consists of a phosphate molecule associated
with a carbon-based molecule, as in plant or animal tissue. Phosphate
that is not associated with organic material is inorganic. Inorganic
phosphate is the form required by plants. Animals can utilize either
organic or inorganic phosphate.
Both organic and inorganic phosphate can either be dissolved in the
water or suspended (attached to particles in the water column).
The Phosphorus Cycle
Things would be a little simpler if phosphorus
stayed put in one form - but it doesn't. It cycles. Aquatic plants
and animals
take in dissolved inorganic phosphorus and convert it to
organic phosphorus
as it becomes part of their tissues.
As plants and animals die or excrete, the organic phosphorus they
contain sinks to the bottom, where bacterial decomposition converts
it back to inorganic phosphorus. This inorganic phosphorus gets back
into the water column when the bottom gets stirred up by animals, chemical
interactions, or water currents. Then it's taken up by plants and the
cycle begins again.

In lakes that undergo seasonal stratification (layering of the water
column by temperature differences from top to bottom), the availability
of phosphorus in the water column varies seasonally. In summer and
winter, when the lake is stratified, the phosphorus on and near the
bottom is trapped by the cooler, more dense bottom waters. During spring
and fall overturn, as the surface and bottom water reach the same temperature
and mix, this trapped phosphorus becomes available in upper layers
of the water column.
Under anoxic conditions (i.e., no detectable dissolved oxygen in the
water), phosphorus from lake sediments is released into the water column,
via a chemical reaction.
Sources of Phosphorus
There are many sources of phosphorus,
both natural and human. These include soil and rocks, wastewater
treatment plants, runoff from
fertilized lawns and crop land, failing septic systems, runoff
from manure storage areas, disturbed land areas, drained wetlands,
and commercial cleaning preparations. These sources may be connected
to the water body either by a pipe or by the myriad paths stormwater
runoff follows from the land to the water. The large number
of sources
and the variety of routes that phosphorus can take make it
difficult to monitor or correct problems with phosphorus over-enrichment.
Republished with permission from U.S. EPA
- http://www.epa.gov/owow/monitoring/volunteer/newsletter/volmon06no1.pdf |