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Dry conditions disrupt terrestrial–aquatic linkages in northern catchments
Authors:Erik J Szkokan‐Emilson  Brian W Kielstra  Shelley E Arnott  Shaun A Watmough  John M Gunn  Andrew J Tanentzap
Institution:1. Ecosystems and Global Change Group, Department of Plant Sciences, University of Cambridge, Cambridge, UK;2. Department of Biology, Queen's University, Kingston, ON, Canada;3. School of the Environment, Trent University, Peterborough, ON, Canada;4. Vale Living with Lakes Centre, Laurentian University, Sudbury, ON, Canada
Abstract:Aquatic ecosystems depend on terrestrial organic matter (tOM) to regulate many functions, such as food web production and water quality, but an increasing frequency and intensity of drought across northern ecosystems is threatening to disrupt this important connection. Dry conditions reduce tOM export and can also oxidize wetland soils and release stored contaminants into stream flow after rainfall. Here, we test whether these disruptions to terrestrial–aquatic linkages occur during mild summer drought and whether this affects biota across 43 littoral zone sites in 11 lakes. We use copper (Cu) and nickel (Ni) as representative contaminants, and measure abundances of Hyalella azteca, a widespread indicator of ecosystem condition and food web production. We found that tOM concentrations were reduced but correlations with organic soils (wetlands and riparian forests) persisted during mild drought and were sufficient to suppress labile Cu concentrations. Wetlands, however, also became a source of labile Ni to littoral zones, which was linked to reduced abundances of the amphipod H. azteca, on average by up to 70 times across the range of observed Ni concentrations. This reveals a duality in the functional linkage of organic soils to aquatic ecosystems whereby they can help buffer the effects of hydrologic disconnection between catchments and lakes but at the cost of biogeochemical changes that release stored contaminants. As evidence of the toxicity of trace contaminant concentrations and their global dispersion grows, sustaining links among forests, organic soils and aquatic ecosystems in a changing climate will become increasingly important.
Keywords:climate change  dissolved organic carbon  drought     Hyalella azteca     littoral invertebrates  metal toxicity  organic soils  terrestrial organic matter
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