Paleo-diatom records reveal ecological change not detected using traditional measures of lake eutrophication

Rose Gregersen, Jamie D. Howarth, Javier Atalah, John K. Pearman, Sean Waters, Xun Li, Marcus J. Vandergoes, Susanna A. Wood,Paleo-diatom records reveal ecological change not detected using traditional measures of lake eutrophication,Science of The Total Environment,Volume 867, 2023, 161414, ISSN 0048-9697, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.scitotenv.2023.161414

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Abstract

Lakes provide crucial ecosystem services and harbour unique and rich biodiversity, yet despite decades of research and management focus, cultural eutrophication remains a predominant threat to their health. Our ability to manage lake eutrophication is restricted by the lack of long-term monitoring records. To circumvent this, we developed a bio-indicator approach for inferring trophic level from lake diatom communities and applied this to sediment cores from two lakes experiencing eutrophication stress. Diatom indicators strongly predicted observed trophic levels, and when applied to sediment cores, diatom predicted trophic level reconstructions were consistent with monitoring data and land-use histories. However, there were significant recent shifts in diatom communities not captured by the diatom-based index or monitoring data, suggesting that conventional trophic level indices obscure important ecological change. New approaches, such as the one in this study, are critical to detect early changes in water quality and prevent the decline of lake ecosystems worldwide.

Contact Susie.Wood[at]lincoln.ac.nz for a copy of this paper.