Declining calcium concentration drives shifts toward smaller and less nutritious zooplankton in northern lakes

Author:

Bergström Ann‐Kristin1ORCID,Creed Irena F.2ORCID,Paltsev Aleksey1ORCID,de Wit Heleen A.34ORCID,Lau Danny C. P.5ORCID,Drakare Stina5ORCID,Vrede Tobias5ORCID,Isles Peter D. F.6ORCID,Jonsson Anders1ORCID,Geibrink Erik1,Kortelainen Pirkko7ORCID,Vuorenmaa Jussi7ORCID,Vuorio Kristiina7ORCID,Kahilainen Kimmo K.8ORCID,Hessen Dag Olav3ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Ecology and Environmental Science Umeå University Umeå Sweden

2. Department of Physical and Environmental Sciences University of Toronto Toronto Ontario Canada

3. Centre of Biogeochemistry in the Anthropocene and Department of Bioscience University of Oslo Oslo Norway

4. Norwegian Institute for Water Research Oslo Norway

5. Department of Aquatic Sciences and Assessment Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences Uppsala Sweden

6. Watershed Management Division Vermont Department of Environmental Conservation Montpelier Vermont USA

7. Finnish Environment Institute (SYKE) Helsinki Finland

8. Lammi Biological Station University of Helsinki Helsinki Finland

Abstract

AbstractZooplankton community composition of northern lakes is changing due to the interactive effects of climate change and recovery from acidification, yet limited data are available to assess these changes combined. Here, we built a database using archives of temperature, water chemistry and zooplankton data from 60 Scandinavian lakes that represent broad spatial and temporal gradients in key parameters: temperature, calcium (Ca), total phosphorus (TP), total organic carbon (TOC), and pH. Using machine learning techniques, we found that Ca was the most important determinant of the relative abundance of all zooplankton groups studied, while pH was second, and TOC third in importance. Further, we found that Ca is declining in almost all lakes, and we detected a critical Ca threshold in lake water of 1.3 mg L−1, below which the relative abundance of zooplankton shifts toward dominance of Holopedium gibberum and small cladocerans at the expense of Daphnia and copepods. Our findings suggest that low Ca concentrations may shape zooplankton communities, and that current trajectories of Ca decline could promote widespread changes in pelagic food webs as zooplankton are important trophic links from phytoplankton to fish and different zooplankton species play different roles in this context.

Funder

Svenska Forskningsrådet Formas

Carl Tryggers Stiftelse för Vetenskaplig Forskning

Vetenskapsrådet

Publisher

Wiley

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