| Literature DB >> 26666217 |
Jean-Philippe Jenny1,2,3, Pierre Francus1,2, Alexandre Normandeau4, François Lapointe1,2, Marie-Elodie Perga5, Antti Ojala6, Arndt Schimmelmann7, Bernd Zolitschka8.
Abstract
The spread of hypoxia is a threat to aquatic ecosystem functions and services as well as to biodiversity. However, sparse long-term monitoring of lake ecosystems has prevented reconstruction of global hypoxia dynamics while inhibiting investigations into its causes and assessing the resilience capacity of these systems. This study compiles the onset and duration of hypoxia recorded in sediments of 365 lakes worldwide since AD 1700, showing that lacustrine hypoxia started spreading before AD 1900, 70 years prior to hypoxia in coastal zones. This study also shows that the increase of human activities and nutrient release is leading to hypoxia onset. No correlations were found with changes in precipitation or temperature. There is no evidence for a post-1980s return to well-oxygenated lacustrine conditions in industrialized countries despite the implementation of restoration programs. The apparent establishment of stable hypoxic conditions prior to AD 1900 highlights the challenges of a growing nutrient demand, accompanied by increasing global nutrient emissions of our industrialized societies, and climate change.Entities:
Keywords: anoxic conditions; aquatic transition; global change; lake ecosystem; local human pressure; varved sediment
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Year: 2016 PMID: 26666217 DOI: 10.1111/gcb.13193
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Glob Chang Biol ISSN: 1354-1013 Impact factor: 10.863