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Lake salinization drives consistent losses of zooplankton abundance and diversity across coordinated mesocosm experiments

Authors :
Hébert, Marie-Pier
Symons, Celia C.
Cañedo-Argüelles, Miguel
Arnott, Shelley E.
Derry, Alison M.
Fugère, Vincent
Hintz, William D.
Melles, Stephanie J.
Astorg, Louis
Baker, Henry K.
Brentrup, Jennifer A.
Downing, Amy L.
Ersoy, Zeynep
Espinosa, Carmen
Franceschini, Jaclyn M.
Giorgio, Angelina T.
Göbeler, Norman
Gray, Derek K.
Greco, Danielle
Hassal, Emily
Huynh, Mercedes
Hylander, Samuel
Jonasen, Kacie L.
Kirkwood, Andrea
Langenheder, Silke
Langvall, Ola
Laudon, Hjalmar
Lind, Lovisa
Lundgren, Maria
McClymont, Alexandra
Proia, Lorenzo
Relyea, Rick A.
Rusak, James A.
Schuler, Matthew S.
Searle, Catherine L.
Shurin, Jonathan B.
Steiner, Christopher F.
Striebel, Maren
Thibodeau, Simon
Urrutia Cordero, Pablo
Vendrell-Puigmitja, Lidia
Weyhenmeyer, Gesa A.
Beisner, Beatrix E.
Hébert, Marie-Pier
Symons, Celia C.
Cañedo-Argüelles, Miguel
Arnott, Shelley E.
Derry, Alison M.
Fugère, Vincent
Hintz, William D.
Melles, Stephanie J.
Astorg, Louis
Baker, Henry K.
Brentrup, Jennifer A.
Downing, Amy L.
Ersoy, Zeynep
Espinosa, Carmen
Franceschini, Jaclyn M.
Giorgio, Angelina T.
Göbeler, Norman
Gray, Derek K.
Greco, Danielle
Hassal, Emily
Huynh, Mercedes
Hylander, Samuel
Jonasen, Kacie L.
Kirkwood, Andrea
Langenheder, Silke
Langvall, Ola
Laudon, Hjalmar
Lind, Lovisa
Lundgren, Maria
McClymont, Alexandra
Proia, Lorenzo
Relyea, Rick A.
Rusak, James A.
Schuler, Matthew S.
Searle, Catherine L.
Shurin, Jonathan B.
Steiner, Christopher F.
Striebel, Maren
Thibodeau, Simon
Urrutia Cordero, Pablo
Vendrell-Puigmitja, Lidia
Weyhenmeyer, Gesa A.
Beisner, Beatrix E.
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

Human-induced salinization increasingly threatens inland waters; yet we know little about the multifaceted response of lake communities to salt contamination. By conducting a coordinated mesocosm experiment of lake salinization across 16 sites in North America and Europe, we quantified the response of zooplankton abundance and (taxonomic and functional) community structure to a broad gradient of environmentally relevant chloride concentrations, ranging from 4 to ca. 1400 mg Cl− L−1. We found that crustaceans were distinctly more sensitive to elevated chloride than rotifers; yet, rotifers did not show compensatory abundance increases in response to crustacean declines. For crustaceans, our among-site comparisons indicate: (1) highly consistent decreases in abundance and taxon richness with salinity; (2) widespread chloride sensitivity across major taxonomic groups (Cladocera, Cyclopoida, and Calanoida); and (3) weaker loss of functional than taxonomic diversity. Overall, our study demonstrates that aggregate properties of zooplankton communities can be adversely affected at chloride concentrations relevant to anthropogenic salinization in lakes.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
application/pdf, English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1372262056
Document Type :
Electronic Resource
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1002.lol2.10239