From Arctic ponds to the “Northern Great Lakes” : algae as first responders of climate-driven regime shifts

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DOI

https://doi.org/10.1111/jpy.13494

Language of the publication
English
Date
2024-08-30
Type
Article
Author(s)
  • Smol, John P.
  • Rühland, Kathleen M.
  • Michelutti, Neal
  • Evans, Marlene S.
Publisher
Wiley

Alternative title

Des étangs de l’Arctique aux « Grands Lacs du Nord » : Les algues, premières à répondre aux changements de régime induits par le climat

Abstract

Arctic freshwater ecosystems are on the “frontline” of climate change, but due to a lack of direct long-term monitoring data, indirect approaches, such as algal-based paleolimnology, must be used to reconstruct past limnological conditions. Our understanding of the responses of small- to mid-sized Arctic lakes to climate warming has increased over the last ~30 years. However, until recently, little was known about even the basic limnological conditions of Canada's “Northern Great Lakes,” such as Lake Hazen, Great Bear Lake, and Great Slave Lake. In this summary, we show that a continuum of algal changes, observable in the sedimentary archives of shallow ponds to very large Arctic lakes, signals the crossing of key aquatic thresholds linked to changing ice covers and thermal regimes, declining wind speeds, and other climate-related variables. With recent accelerated warming, even the largest and most resilient Arctic waterbodies are now fundamentally different than they were just a few decades ago. These changes will undoubtedly cascade throughout the food web leading to important changes for local Indigenous populations as well as the global community.

Subject

  • Nature and environment,
  • Science and technology

Rights

Pagination

7 pages

Peer review

Yes

Open access level

Gold

Identifiers

ISSN
1529-8817
0022-3646

Article

Journal title
Journal of Phycology
Accepted date
2024-08-06
Submitted date
2024-06-27

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Collection(s)

Biodiversity

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