Author:
Clerk Saloni,Selbie Daniel T,Smol John P
Abstract
Lake eutrophication due to cage aquaculture is an area of concern in Ontario; however, without knowledge of pre-impact conditions, it is difficult to determine the extent and magnitude of environmental change. Paleolimnological techniques were used to estimate water-quality conditions prior to, during, and briefly following aquaculture operation in the LaCloche Channel, Lake Huron. Past oxygen and nutrient levels were inferred from assemblages of chironomids and diatoms, respectively, to determine whether recent low-oxygen and nutrient-rich conditions were related to cage aquaculture in operation from 1989 to 1998. Chironomid assemblages exhibited trends consistent with decreased hypolimnetic oxygen levels, with reductions in oxic-type profundal taxa and increased relative abundances of littoral communities. Diatom assemblages reflected a period of nutrient enrichment by increased relative abundances of meso-eutrophic taxa. Improvements in water quality are inferred from assemblages of diatoms in surface sediments, which may correspond to the cessation of fish-farming activities in 1998. In contrast, no sign of deep-water oxygen recovery is recorded by chironomids. These trends are consistent with eutrophication, and suggest that the LaCloche Channel was sensitive to nutrient loading from the cage-aquaculture operation. This study demonstrates the potential of using paleolimnological techniques to track water-quality changes associated with cage farming.
Publisher
Canadian Science Publishing
Subject
Aquatic Science,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics
Cited by
21 articles.
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