4.3 Article

Biomonitoring using invasive species in a large Lake: Dreissena distribution maps hypoxic zones

Journal

JOURNAL OF GREAT LAKES RESEARCH
Volume 44, Issue 4, Pages 639-649

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.jglr.2017.08.001

Keywords

ELCOM-CAEDYM; Mapping hypoxia; Dreissena rostriformis bugensis; Lake Erie; Oxygen dynamics

Funding

  1. U.S. Geological Survey, Department of the Interior, under USGS [G14AC000263]
  2. Cornell University, Department of Natural Resources under the U.S. EPA Great Lakes Long-Term Biological Monitoring of Zooplankton, Benthos, and Chlorophyll a [GL00E01184]
  3. University of Michigan Graham Sustainability Institute
  4. USEPA [EP-R5-11-07, 21]

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Due to cultural eutrophication and global climate change, an exponential increase in the number and extent of hypoxic zones in marine and freshwater ecosystems has been observed in the last few decades. Hypoxia, or low dissolved oxygen (DO) concentrations, can produce strong negative ecological impacts and, therefore, is a management concern. We measured biomass and densities of Dreissena in Lake Erie, as well as bottom DO in 2014 using 19 high frequency data loggers distributed throughout the central basin to validate a three-dimensional hydrodynamic-ecological lake model. We found that a deep, offshore hypoxic zone was formed by early August, restricting the Dreissena population to shallow areas of the central basin. Deeper than 20 m, where bottom hypoxia routinely develops, only young of the year mussels were found in small numbers, indicating restricted recruitment and survival of young Dreissena. We suggest that monitoring Dreissena distribution can be an effective tool for mapping the extent and frequency of hypoxia in freshwater. In addition, our results suggest that an anticipated decrease in the spatial extent of hypoxia resulting from nutrient management has the potential to increase the spatial extent of profundal habitat in the central basin available for Dreissena expansion. (C) 2017 International Association for Great Lakes Research. Published by Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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