4.3 Article

When glaciers and ice sheets melt: consequences for planktonic organisms

Journal

JOURNAL OF PLANKTON RESEARCH
Volume 37, Issue 3, Pages 509-518

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/plankt/fbv027

Keywords

climate change; glacial lakes; glacial flour; planktonic food-web; Daphnia; mixotrophy; grazing; bacteria; viruses; DOM

Funding

  1. Austrian Science Fund (FWF) through the Project BACK-ALP [P24442]
  2. Carlsberg Foundation [2013_01_0535]
  3. Austrian Science Fund (FWF) [P24442] Funding Source: Austrian Science Fund (FWF)
  4. Austrian Science Fund (FWF) [P 24442] Funding Source: researchfish

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The current melting of glaciers and ice sheets is a consequence of climatic change and their turbid meltwaters are filling and enlarging many new proglacial and ice-contact lakes around the world, as well as affecting coastal areas. Paradoxically, very little is known on the ecology of turbid glacier-fed aquatic ecosystems even though they are at the origin of the most common type of lakes on Earth. Here, I discuss the consequences of those meltwaters for planktonic organisms. A remarkable characteristic of aquatic ecosystems receiving the discharge of meltwaters is their high content of mineral suspensoids, so-called glacial flour that poses a real challenge for filter-feeding planktonic taxa such as Daphnia and phagotrophic groups such as heterotrophic nanoflagellates. The planktonic food-web structure in highly turbid meltwater lakes seems to be truncated and microbially dominated. Low underwater light levels leads to unfavorable conditions for primary producers, but at the same time, cause less stress by UV radiation. Meltwaters are also a source of inorganic and organic nutrients that could stimulate secondary prokaryotic production and in some cases (e.g. in distal proglacial lakes) also phytoplankton primary production. How changes in turbidity and in other related environmental factors influence diversity, community composition and adaptation have only recently begun to be studied. Knowledge of the consequences of glacier retreat for glacier-fed lakes and coasts will be crucial to predict ecosystem trajectories regarding changes in biodiversity, biogeochemical cycles and function.

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