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Anomalous rise in algal production linked to lakewater calcium decline through food web interactions
Authors:Korosi Jennifer B  Burke Samantha M  Thienpont Joshua R  Smol John P
Institution:Paleoecological Environmental Assessment and Research Laboratory (PEARL), Department of Biology, Queen's University, Kingston Ontario, Canada.
Abstract:Increased algal blooms are a threat to aquatic ecosystems worldwide, although the combined effects of multiple stressors make it difficult to determine the underlying causes. We explore whether changes in trophic interactions in response to declining calcium (Ca) concentrations, a water quality issue only recently recognized in Europe and North America, can be linked with unexplained bloom production. Using a palaeolimnological approach analysing the remains of Cladocera (herbivorous grazers) and visual reflectance spectroscopically inferred chlorophyll a from the sediments of a Nova Scotia (Canada) lake, we show that a keystone grazer, Daphnia, declined in the early 1990s and was replaced by a less effective grazer, Bosmina, while inferred chlorophyll a levels tripled at constant total phosphorus (TP) concentrations. The decline in Daphnia cannot be attributed to changes in pH, thermal stratification or predation, but instead is linked to declining lakewater Ca]. The consistency in the timing of changes in Daphnia and inferred chlorophyll a suggests top-down control on algal production, providing, to our knowledge, the first evidence of a link between lakewater Ca] decline and elevated algal production mediated through the effects of Ca] decline on Daphnia. Ca] decline has severe implications for whole-lake food webs, and presents yet another mechanism for potential increases in algal blooms.
Keywords:palaeolimnology  lakewater calcium decline  Cladocera  chlorophyll a  trophic interactions
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