4.6 Article

Lakes in the era of global change: moving beyond single-lake thinking in maintaining biodiversity and ecosystem services

Journal

BIOLOGICAL REVIEWS
Volume 96, Issue 1, Pages 89-106

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/brv.12647

Keywords

biological diversity; ecosystem change; fresh waters; meta-system; monitoring; resilience; restoration

Categories

Funding

  1. Strategic Research Council of the Academy of Finland [312650]
  2. Academy of Finland
  3. CNPq
  4. FAPEG [304314/2014-5, 465610/2014-5]
  5. Youth Innovation Promotion Association CAS [2020316]
  6. projects FRESHABIT LIFE IP [LIFE14/IPE/FI/023]
  7. Strategic Research Council at the Academy of Finland [312559]

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Lakes are crucial for maintaining ecological balance and providing ecosystem services, but face challenges like invasion by non-native species and accumulation of harmful substances in the Anthropocene. Interdisciplinary research and integration of models are essential for the restoration and management of lake biodiversity and ecosystem services.
The Anthropocene presents formidable threats to freshwater ecosystems. Lakes are especially vulnerable and important at the same time. They cover only a small area worldwide but harbour high levels of biodiversity and contribute disproportionately to ecosystem services. Lakes differ with respect to their general type (e.g. land-locked, drainage, floodplain and large lakes) and position in the landscape (e.g. highlandversuslowland lakes), which contribute to the dynamics of these systems. Lakes should be generally viewed as 'meta-systems', whereby biodiversity is strongly affected by species dispersal, and ecosystem dynamics are contributed by the flow of matter and substances among locations in a broader waterscape context. Lake connectivity in the waterscape and position in the landscape determine the degree to which a lake is prone to invasion by non-native species and accumulation of harmful substances. Highly connected lakes low in the landscape accumulate nutrients and pollutants originating from ecosystems higher in the landscape. The monitoring and restoration of lake biodiversity and ecosystem services should consider the fact that a high degree of dynamism is present at local, regional and global scales. However, local and regional monitoring may be plagued by the unpredictability of ecological phenomena, hindering adaptive management of lakes. Although monitoring data are increasingly becoming available to study responses of lakes to global change, we still lack suitable integration of models for entire waterscapes. Research across disciplinary boundaries is needed to address the challenges that lakes face in the Anthropocene because they may play an increasingly important role in harbouring unique aquatic biota as well as providing ecosystem goods and services in the future.

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