4.3 Article

The benthic community of the Laurentian Great Lakes: Analysis of spatial gradients and temporal trends from 1998 to 2014

Journal

JOURNAL OF GREAT LAKES RESEARCH
Volume 44, Issue 4, Pages 600-617

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.jglr.2018.04.008

Keywords

Benthic invertebrates; Biomonitoring; Great Lakes; Exotic species; Community analysis

Funding

  1. Cornell University, Department of Natural Resources from the U.S. EPA Great Lakes Long-Term Biological Monitoring of Zooplankton, Benthos, and Chlorophyll a [6850010015, GL 00E01184]

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We used the results of seventeen years of Great Lakes benthic monitoring conducted by the U.S. EPA's Great Lakes National Program Office to describe the spatial and temporal patterns of benthic communities, assess their status, trends, and main drivers, and to infer the potential impact of these community changes on ecosystem functioning. Benthic abundance and diversity were higher at shallow (<70 m in depth) stations with chlorophyll concentrations above 3 mu g/L than at deeper sites (<1 mu g/L). We infer that lake productivity, measured by chlorophyll was likely the major driver of benthic abundance and diversity across lakes. Consequently, benthic diversity and abundance were the highest in the most productive Lake Erie, followed by lakes Ontario, Michigan, Huron, and Superior. Multivariate analysis distinguished three major communities shared among lakes (littoral, sublittoral, and profundal) that differed in species composition and abundance, functional group diversity, and tolerance to organic pollution. Analysis of temporal trends revealed that the largest changes occurred in profundal communities, apparent in significant shifts in dominant taxa across all lakes except Lake Superior. In lakes Michigan, Huron, and Ontario, the former dominant Diporeia was replaced with Dreissena and Oligochaeta. Profundal species, with the exception of dreissenids, became less abundant, and their depth distribution has shifted. In contrast, density and diversity of native littoral and sublittoral communities increased. The invasion of dreissenids was among the most important drivers of changes in benthic communities. Continued monitoring is critical for tracking unprecedented changes occurring in the Great Lakes ecosystem. (C) 2018 The Author(s). Published by Elsevier B.V. on behalf of International Association for Great Lakes Research.

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