4.8 Article

A large-scale assessment of lakes reveals a pervasive signal of land use on bacterial communities

期刊

ISME JOURNAL
卷 14, 期 12, 页码 3011-3023

出版社

SPRINGERNATURE
DOI: 10.1038/s41396-020-0733-0

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资金

  1. genome Quebec
  2. Genome Canada
  3. NSERC Canadian LakePulse network (Strategic Partnership network) [NETG 479720-15]
  4. NSERC [6693-2016]
  5. NSERC Canadian Research Chair [230456]
  6. FQRNT fellowship
  7. NSERC/CREATE-GRIL fellowship

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Lakes play a pivotal role in ecological and biogeochemical processes and have been described as sentinels of environmental change. Assessing lake health across large geographic scales is critical to predict the stability of their ecosystem services and their vulnerability to anthropogenic disturbances. The LakePulse research network is tasked with the assessment of lake health across gradients of land use on a continental scale. Bacterial communities are an integral and rapidly responding component of lake ecosystems, yet large-scale responses to anthropogenic activity remain elusive. Here, we assess the ecological impact of land use on bacterial communities from over 200 lakes covering more than 660,000 km(2)across Eastern Canada. In addition to community variation between ecozones, land use across Eastern Canada also appeared to alter diversity, community composition, and network structure. Specifically, increasing anthropogenic impact within the watershed lowered diversity. Likewise, community composition was significantly correlated with agriculture and urban development within a watershed. Interaction networks showed decreasing complexity and fewer keystone taxa in impacted lakes. Moreover, we identified potential indicator taxa of high or low lake water quality. Together, these findings point to detectable bacterial community changes of largely unknown consequences induced by human activity within lake watersheds.

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