Climate exerts a greater modulating effect on the phytoplankton community after 2007 in eutrophic Lake Taihu, China: Evidence from 25 years of recordings

Guo, C; Zhu, G; Qin, B; Zhang, Y; Zhu, M; Xu, Hai; Chen, Y; Paerl, HW

HERO ID

6332106

Reference Type

Journal Article

Year

2019

HERO ID 6332106
In Press No
Year 2019
Title Climate exerts a greater modulating effect on the phytoplankton community after 2007 in eutrophic Lake Taihu, China: Evidence from 25 years of recordings
Authors Guo, C; Zhu, G; Qin, B; Zhang, Y; Zhu, M; Xu, Hai; Chen, Y; Paerl, HW
Journal Ecological Indicators
Volume 105
Page Numbers 82-91
Abstract Long-term phytoplankton community changes indicate the trophic status under nutrient regulation conditions in eutrophic lakes, although the modulatory role of climate change scenarios in their indicative function has been underestimated. Hence, we analyzed the relative contributions of nutrient and climate factors to interannual and seasonal variations in the phytoplankton biomass and composition from 1992 to 2017 in Meiliang Bay, Lake Taihu, China. Discrete phytoplankton communities from five periods were classified according to their interannual features. Variations in the phytoplankton community composition were observed during the five periods, and these variations included a shift from exclusive cyanobacterial dominance before 2008 to diatom-cyanobacterial codominance in 2008-2010 and from cyanobacterial dominance in 2011-2014 to cyanobacterial-diatom codominance in 2015-2017. The phytoplankton biomass pattern typically peaked in summer, although peaks also occurred in winter 2008-2010 and autumn 2011-2014. Additionally, the phytoplankton biomass increased by threefold from 2015 to 2017, which might have been related to rising air temperatures and greater light availability. The variance in the phytoplankton community was significantly explained by nutrient (ammonium, nitrate and phosphate) and climatic (air temperature and wind speed) factors. However, the explaining effect of the factors varied among the five periods: nutrients strongly impacted the community composition from 1992 to 2007, whereas climatic variables became more important modulators after 2007. These results reveal that climatic factors play importance roles in shaping the phytoplankton community and cyanobacterial blooms and suggest that differences in the roles between specific climatic conditions should be considered. Future declines in cyanobacterial blooms require further dual nitrogen and phosphorus reduction and longer recovery times under current climate change scenarios in this and possibly other shallow eutrophic lakes.
Doi 10.1016/j.ecolind.2019.05.034
Wosid WOS:000490574200009
Is Certified Translation No
Dupe Override No
Is Public Yes
Keyword Nutrient; Climate change; Phytoplankton community; Cyanobacterial blooms; Lake Taihu; Shallow lakes