Literature DB >> 16944640

Cumulative effects of climate warming and other human activities on freshwaters of Arctic and subarctic North America.

David W Schindler1, John P Smol.   

Abstract

Despite their generally isolated geographic locations, the freshwaters of the north are subjected to a wide spectrum of environmental stressors. High-latitude regions are especially sensitive to the effects of recent climatic warming, which have already resulted in marked regime shifts in the biological communities of many Arctic lakes and ponds. Important drivers of these limnological changes have included changes in the amount and duration of snow and ice cover, and, for rivers and lakes in their deltas, the frequency and extent of spring floods. Other important climate-related shifts include alterations in evaporation and precipitation ratios, marked changes in the quality and quantity of lake and river water inflows due to accelerated glacier and permafrost melting, and declining percentages of precipitation that falls as snow. The depletion of stratospheric ozone over the north, together with the clarity of many Arctic lakes, renders them especially susceptible to damage from ultraviolet radiation. In addition, the long-range atmospheric transport of pollutants, coupled with the focusing effects of contaminant transport from biological vectors to some local ecosystems (e.g., salmon nursery lakes, ponds draining seabird colonies) and biomagnification in long food chains, have led to elevated concentrations of many persistent organic pollutants (e.g., insecticides, which have never been used in Arctic regions) and other pollutants (e.g., mercury). Rapid development of gas and oil pipelines, mining for diamonds and metals, increases in human populations, and the development of all-season roads, seaports, and hydroelectric dams will stress northern aquatic ecosystems. The cumulative effects of these stresses will be far more serious than those caused by changing climate alone.

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Year:  2006        PMID: 16944640     DOI: 10.1579/0044-7447(2006)35[160:ceocwa]2.0.co;2

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Ambio        ISSN: 0044-7447            Impact factor:   5.129


  9 in total

1.  Changes in tundra pond limnology: re-sampling Alaskan ponds after 40 years.

Authors:  Vanessa L Lougheed; Malcolm G Butler; Daniel C McEwen; John E Hobbie
Journal:  Ambio       Date:  2011-09       Impact factor: 5.129

2.  Mercury concentrations in lentic fish populations related to ecosystem and watershed characteristics.

Authors:  Andrew L Rypel
Journal:  Ambio       Date:  2010-02       Impact factor: 5.129

3.  Relations between water physico-chemistry and benthic algal communities in a northern Canadian watershed: defining reference conditions using multiple descriptors of community structure.

Authors:  Kathryn E Thomas; Roland I Hall; Garry J Scrimgeour
Journal:  Environ Monit Assess       Date:  2015-08-09       Impact factor: 2.513

4.  Lake size and fish diversity determine resource use and trophic position of a top predator in high-latitude lakes.

Authors:  Antti P Eloranta; Kimmo K Kahilainen; Per-Arne Amundsen; Rune Knudsen; Chris Harrod; Roger I Jones
Journal:  Ecol Evol       Date:  2015-03-23       Impact factor: 2.912

5.  Climate and permafrost effects on the chemistry and ecosystems of High Arctic Lakes.

Authors:  K E Roberts; S F Lamoureux; T K Kyser; D C G Muir; M J Lafrenière; D Iqaluk; A J Pieńkowski; A Normandeau
Journal:  Sci Rep       Date:  2017-10-16       Impact factor: 4.379

6.  Characterizing neutral and adaptive genomic differentiation in a changing climate: The most northerly freshwater fish as a model.

Authors:  Kathleen G O'Malley; Felix Vaux; Andrew N Black
Journal:  Ecol Evol       Date:  2019-01-15       Impact factor: 2.912

7.  Use of pre-industrial baselines to monitor anthropogenic enrichment of metals concentrations in recently deposited sediment of floodplain lakes in the Peace-Athabasca Delta (Alberta, Canada).

Authors:  Tanner J Owca; Mitchell L Kay; Jelle Faber; Casey R Remmer; Nelson Zabel; Johan A Wiklund; Brent B Wolfe; Roland I Hall
Journal:  Environ Monit Assess       Date:  2020-01-10       Impact factor: 2.513

8.  Fine-scale behavioural differences distinguish resource use by ecomorphs in a closed ecosystem.

Authors:  Kate L Hawley; Carolyn M Rosten; Guttorm Christensen; Martyn C Lucas
Journal:  Sci Rep       Date:  2016-04-21       Impact factor: 4.379

9.  Trends in the Timing and Magnitude of Ice-Jam Floods in Canada.

Authors:  Prabin Rokaya; Sujata Budhathoki; Karl-Erich Lindenschmidt
Journal:  Sci Rep       Date:  2018-04-11       Impact factor: 4.379

  9 in total

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