Paleolimnological evidence reveals climate-related preeminence of cyanobacteria in a temperate meromictic lake
Canadian Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences, 2022•cdnsciencepub.com
Meromictic lakes provide a physically stable environment in which proxies for potentially
harmful cyanobacteria are exceptionally well-preserved in the sediments. In Sunfish Lake, a
meromictic lake that has recently become the focus of citizen concern due to the apparent
rise in cyanobacteria blooms, we used a multi-proxy paleolimnological approach pairing
novel spectral (ie, VNIRS) and molecular (ie, qPCR) assessment tools to explore long-term
cyanobacteria trends. We hypothesized that climate change over the past 50 years altered …
harmful cyanobacteria are exceptionally well-preserved in the sediments. In Sunfish Lake, a
meromictic lake that has recently become the focus of citizen concern due to the apparent
rise in cyanobacteria blooms, we used a multi-proxy paleolimnological approach pairing
novel spectral (ie, VNIRS) and molecular (ie, qPCR) assessment tools to explore long-term
cyanobacteria trends. We hypothesized that climate change over the past 50 years altered …
Meromictic lakes provide a physically stable environment in which proxies for potentially harmful cyanobacteria are exceptionally well-preserved in the sediments. In Sunfish Lake, a meromictic lake that has recently become the focus of citizen concern due to the apparent rise in cyanobacteria blooms, we used a multi-proxy paleolimnological approach pairing novel spectral (i.e., VNIRS) and molecular (i.e., qPCR) assessment tools to explore long-term cyanobacteria trends. We hypothesized that climate change over the past 50 years altered the Sunfish Lake environment to favour cyanobacteria dominance, resulting in an increased incidence of bloom events. Spectral and genetic results aligned to reveal an unprecedented abundance of cyanobacteria in modern times and coincided with warmer and wetter climatic conditions in the region. Our findings offer evidence for climate-driven shifts in cyanobacteria abundance and suggest that a shift towards warmer and wetter conditions supports the rise of cyanobacteria in lakes.
Canadian Science Publishing
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