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Climate change amplifies the risk of potentially toxigenic cyanobacteria
Authors:Kevin J. Erratt  Irena F. Creed  David A. Lobb  John P. Smol  Charles G. Trick
Affiliation:1. School of Environment and Sustainability, University of Saskatchewan, Saskatoon, Saskatchewan, Canada;2. Department of Soil Science, University of Manitoba, Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada;3. Paleoecological Environmental Assessment and Research Lab, Department of Biology, Queen's University, Kingston, Ontario, Canada;4. Department of Health and Society, University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario, Canada
Abstract:Cyanobacterial blooms pose a significant threat to water security, with anthropogenic forcing being implicated as a key driver behind the recent upsurge and global expansion of cyanobacteria in modern times. The potential effects of land-use alterations and climate change can lead to complicated, less-predictable scenarios in cyanobacterial management, especially when forecasting cyanobacterial toxin risks. There is a growing need for further investigations into the specific stressors that stimulate cyanobacterial toxins, as well as resolving the uncertainty surrounding the historical or contemporary nature of cyanobacterial-associated risks. To address this gap, we employed a paleolimnological approach to reconstruct cyanobacterial abundance and microcystin-producing potential in temperate lakes situated along a human impact gradient. We identified breakpoints (i.e., points of abrupt change) in these time series and examined the impact of landscape and climatic properties on their occurrence. Our findings indicate that lakes subject to greater human influence exhibited an earlier onset of cyanobacterial biomass by 40 years compared to less-impacted lakes, with land-use change emerging as the dominant predictor. Moreover, microcystin-producing potential increased in both high- and low-impact lakes around the 1980s, with climate warming being the primary driver. Our findings chronicle the importance of climate change in increasing the risk of toxigenic cyanobacteria in freshwater resources.
Keywords:Anthropocene  climate change  cyanobacteria  freshwater  genetics  microcystins  paleolimnology  water quality
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