4.5 Article

Limnological regime shifts caused by climate warming and Lesser Snow Goose population expansion in the western Hudson Bay Lowlands (Manitoba, Canada)

Journal

ECOLOGY AND EVOLUTION
Volume 5, Issue 4, Pages 921-939

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/ece3.1354

Keywords

Carbon isotopes; climate warming; diatoms; Hudson Bay Lowlands; Lesser Snow Goose; limnology; nitrogen isotopes; paleolimnology; pigments; tundra pond

Funding

  1. Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada
  2. Polar Continental Shelf Program
  3. Northern Scientific Training Program
  4. Parks Canada
  5. Churchill Northern Studies Centre (Northern Research Fund)
  6. Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada Canadian Graduate Scholarship
  7. W. Garfield Weston Foundation Northern Research Award
  8. Ontario Graduate Scholarships

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Shallow lakes are dominant features in subarctic and Arctic landscapes and are responsive to multiple stressors, which can lead to rapid changes in limnological regimes with consequences for aquatic resources. We address this theme in the coastal tundra region of Wapusk National Park, western Hudson Bay Lowlands (Canada), where climate has warmed during the past century and the Lesser Snow Goose (LSG; Chen caerulescens caerulescens) population has grown rapidly during the past similar to 40years. Integration of limnological and paleolimnological analyses documents profound responses of productivity, nutrient cycling, and aquatic habitat to warming at three ponds (WAP 12, WAP 20, and WAP 21), and to LSG disturbance at the two ponds located in an active nesting area (WAP 20, WAP 21). Based on multiparameter analysis of Pb-210-dated sediment records from all three ponds, a regime shift occurred between 1875 and 1900 CE marked by a transition from low productivity, turbid, and nutrient-poor conditions of the Little Ice Age to conditions of higher productivity, lower nitrogen availability, and the development of benthic biofilm habitat as a result of climate warming. Beginning in the mid-1970s, sediment records from WAP 20 and WAP 21 reveal a second regime shift characterized by accelerated productivity and increased nitrogen availability. Coupled with 3years of limnological data, results suggest that increased productivity at WAP 20 and WAP 21 led to atmospheric CO2 invasion to meet algal photosynthetic demand. This limnological regime shift is attributed to an increase in the supply of catchment-derived nutrients from the arrival of LSG and their subsequent disturbance to the landscape. Collectively, findings discriminate the consequences of warming and LSG disturbance on tundra ponds from which we identify a suite of sensitive limnological and paleolimnological measures that can be utilized to inform aquatic ecosystem monitoring.

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