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Multi‐decadal changes in phytoplankton biomass in northern temperate lakes as seen through the prism of landscape properties

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Ecologists collectively predict that climate change will enhance phytoplankton biomass in northern lakes. Yet there are unique variations in the structures and regulating functions of lakes to make this prediction… Click to show full abstract

Ecologists collectively predict that climate change will enhance phytoplankton biomass in northern lakes. Yet there are unique variations in the structures and regulating functions of lakes to make this prediction challengeable and, perhaps, inaccurate. We used archived Landsat TM/ETM+ satellite products to estimate epilimnetic chlorophyll‐a (Chl‐a) concentration as a proxy for phytoplankton biomass in 281 northern temperate lakes over 28 years. We explored the influence of climate (air temperature, precipitation) and landscape proxies for nutrient sources (proportion of wetlands in a contributing catchment, size of the littoral zone, potential for wind‐driven sediment resuspension as estimated by the dynamic ratio) or nutrient sinks (lake volume) in a random forest model to explain heterogeneity in peak Chl‐a. Lakes with higher Chl‐a (median Chl‐a = 2.4 μg L−1, n = 40) had smaller volumes (<44 × 104 m3) and were more sensitive to increases in temperature. In contrast, lakes with lower Chl‐a (median Chl‐a = 0.6 μg L−1, n = 241) had larger volumes (≥44 × 104 m3), contributing catchments with smaller proportions of wetlands (<4.5% of catchment area, n = 70), smaller littoral zones (<16.4 ha, n = 137), minimal wind‐driven sediment resuspension (as defined by the dynamic ratio; <0.45, n = 232), and were more sensitive to increases in precipitation. Lakes with larger volumes were generally less responsive to climate factors; however, larger volume lakes with a significant proportion of wetlands and larger littoral zones behaved similarly to lakes with smaller volumes. Our finding that lakes with different landscape properties respond differently to climate factors may help predict the susceptibility of lakes to eutrophication under changing climatic conditions.

Keywords: chl; phytoplankton biomass; northern temperate; biomass northern; landscape

Journal Title: Global Change Biology
Year Published: 2022

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