4.7 Article

Recent and subfossil diatom assemblages as indicators of environmental change (including fish introduction) in a high-mountain lake

Journal

ECOLOGICAL INDICATORS
Volume 125, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.ecolind.2021.107603

Keywords

Diatom assemblages; Paleolimnology; Non-native fish introduction; Cattle grazing; Environmental change; Global warming; Conservation ecology; Alps

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Studying diatoms in high-mountain lakes provides insights into their response to factors such as fish introduction, cattle grazing, and global warming. It helps understand the complex interaction patterns among different stressors and supports adaptive and sustainable management of high-mountain lakes for nature conservation.
We investigated modern-littoral and subfossil sediment-core diatoms in the shallow (max depth 6.4 m) high-mountain Lake Balma in the Orsiera Rocciavre Nature Park (Italian Western Alps). Our study provided evidence that might be related to the response of diatom assemblages to fish introduction, in particular the decreasing of the nutrient-enrichment sensitive low-profile life-form/ecological guild and the increase in species known to react positively to the augmented nutrient availability due to fish excretions (e.g., Fragilaria nanana, Pseudostaurosira brevistriata, Staurosirella neopinnata). We are, however, aware that some of these effects could as well have been caused by pastures and cattle watering, and by increased temperatures due to global warming, and we acknowledge the typical complex-interaction pattern among different stressors. High-mountain lakes are early warning systems for the whole alpine system and can contribute valuable information also on the interactions between environmental global changes and anthropogenic impacts. Benthic diatoms, in particular, can provide useful indications on the deleterious effects of non-native fish introduction, cattle grazing, and global warming, and thus support an adaptive and sustainable management of high-mountain lakes for the sake of nature conservation.

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