TY - JOUR
T1 - Nutrients and not temperature are the key drivers for cyanobacterial biomass in the Americas
AU - Bonilla, Sylvia
AU - Aguilera, Anabella
AU - Aubriot, Luis
AU - Huszar, Vera
AU - Almanza, Viviana
AU - Haakonsson, Signe
AU - Izaguirre, Irina
AU - O'Farrell, Inés
AU - Salazar, Anthony
AU - Becker, Vanessa
AU - Cremella, Bruno
AU - Ferragut, Carla
AU - Hernandez, Esnedy
AU - Palacio, Hilda
AU - Rodrigues, Luzia Cleide
AU - Sampaio da Silva, Lúcia Helena
AU - Santana, Lucineide Maria
AU - Santos, Juliana
AU - Somma, Andrea
AU - Ortega, Laura
AU - Antoniades, Dermot
N1 - Funding Information:
This work was partially financed by the National Agency for Science (ANII, project number FCE_6384) and CSIC (I + D 171) of Uruguay. A. Almanza's participation was supported by CRHIAM Center ANID/FONDAP/15130015. We thank Milla Rautio, Manuel Cano, Anna Przytulska, Warwick Vincent, the Water Quality Agency (Laboratorio Calidad de Agua de AMSA) of Guatemala and the Quebec Ministry of Sustainable Development, Environment, and Fight Against Climate Change (DGSEE, MDDELCC) of Canada for contributing to the dataset. We thank John Smol and two anonymous reviewers for valuable comments.
Funding Information:
This work was partially financed by the National Agency for Science (ANII, project number FCE_6384 ) and CSIC (I + D 171) of Uruguay. A. Almanza's participation was supported by CRHIAM Center ANID/FONDAP/15130015 . We thank Milla Rautio, Manuel Cano, Anna Przytulska, Warwick Vincent, the Water Quality Agency (Laboratorio Calidad de Agua de AMSA) of Guatemala and the Quebec Ministry of Sustainable Development, Environment, and Fight Against Climate Change (DGSEE, MDDELCC) of Canada for contributing to the dataset. We thank John Smol and two anonymous reviewers for valuable comments.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2022 Elsevier B.V.
PY - 2023/1
Y1 - 2023/1
N2 - Cyanobacterial blooms imperil the use of freshwater around the globe and present challenges for water management. Studies have suggested that blooms are trigged by high temperatures and nutrient concentrations. While the roles of nitrogen and phosphorus have long been debated, cyanobacterial dominance in phytoplankton has widely been associated with climate warming. However, studies at large geographical scales, covering diverse climate regions and lake depths, are still needed to clarify the drivers of cyanobacterial success. Here, we analyzed data from 464 lakes covering a 14,000 km north-south gradient in the Americas and three lake depth categories. We show that there were no clear trends in cyanobacterial biomass (as biovolume) along latitude or climate gradients, with the exception of lower biomass in polar climates. Phosphorus was the primary resource explaining cyanobacterial biomass in the Americas, while nitrogen was also significant but particularly relevant in very shallow lakes (< 3 m depth). Despite the assessed climatic gradient water temperature was only weakly related to cyanobacterial biomass, suggesting it is overemphasized in current discussions. Depth was critical for predicting cyanobacterial biomass, and shallow lakes proved more vulnerable to eutrophication. Among other variables analyzed, only pH was significantly related to cyanobacteria biomass, likely due to a biologically mediated positive feedback under high nutrient conditions. Solutions toward managing harmful cyanobacteria should thus consider lake morphometric characteristics and emphasize nutrient control, independently of temperature gradients, since local factors are more critical – and more amenable to controls – than global external forces.
AB - Cyanobacterial blooms imperil the use of freshwater around the globe and present challenges for water management. Studies have suggested that blooms are trigged by high temperatures and nutrient concentrations. While the roles of nitrogen and phosphorus have long been debated, cyanobacterial dominance in phytoplankton has widely been associated with climate warming. However, studies at large geographical scales, covering diverse climate regions and lake depths, are still needed to clarify the drivers of cyanobacterial success. Here, we analyzed data from 464 lakes covering a 14,000 km north-south gradient in the Americas and three lake depth categories. We show that there were no clear trends in cyanobacterial biomass (as biovolume) along latitude or climate gradients, with the exception of lower biomass in polar climates. Phosphorus was the primary resource explaining cyanobacterial biomass in the Americas, while nitrogen was also significant but particularly relevant in very shallow lakes (< 3 m depth). Despite the assessed climatic gradient water temperature was only weakly related to cyanobacterial biomass, suggesting it is overemphasized in current discussions. Depth was critical for predicting cyanobacterial biomass, and shallow lakes proved more vulnerable to eutrophication. Among other variables analyzed, only pH was significantly related to cyanobacteria biomass, likely due to a biologically mediated positive feedback under high nutrient conditions. Solutions toward managing harmful cyanobacteria should thus consider lake morphometric characteristics and emphasize nutrient control, independently of temperature gradients, since local factors are more critical – and more amenable to controls – than global external forces.
KW - Blooms
KW - Climate change
KW - Eutrophication
KW - Freshwater
KW - Global gradients
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85144300405&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/j.hal.2022.102367
DO - 10.1016/j.hal.2022.102367
M3 - Original Article
C2 - 36639186
AN - SCOPUS:85144300405
SN - 1568-9883
VL - 121
JO - Harmful Algae
JF - Harmful Algae
M1 - 102367
ER -