Anoxia begets anoxia: A positive feedback to the deoxygenation of temperate lakes

Author:

Lewis Abigail S. L.1ORCID,Lau Maximilian P.2ORCID,Jane Stephen F.3ORCID,Rose Kevin C.4ORCID,Be'eri‐Shlevin Yaron5ORCID,Burnet Sarah H.6ORCID,Clayer François7ORCID,Feuchtmayr Heidrun8ORCID,Grossart Hans‐Peter910ORCID,Howard Dexter W.1ORCID,Mariash Heather11ORCID,Delgado Martin Jordi12ORCID,North Rebecca L.13ORCID,Oleksy Isabella14ORCID,Pilla Rachel M.15ORCID,Smagula Amy P.16,Sommaruga Ruben17ORCID,Steiner Sara E.16,Verburg Piet18ORCID,Wain Danielle19ORCID,Weyhenmeyer Gesa A.20ORCID,Carey Cayelan C.1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Biological Sciences Virginia Tech Blacksburg Virginia USA

2. Interdisciplinary Environmental Research Centre Technical University of Mining and Resources Freiberg Freiberg Germany

3. Department of Natural Resources and the Environment and Cornell Atkinson Center for Sustainability Cornell University Ithaca New York USA

4. Department of Biological Sciences Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute Troy New York USA

5. The Kinneret Limnological Laboratory Israel Oceanographic and Limnological Research Migdal Israel

6. Department of Fish and Wildlife Sciences University of Idaho Moscow Idaho USA

7. Norwegian Institute of Water Research Oslo Norway

8. Lake Ecosystems Group UK Centre for Ecology & Hydrology Lancaster UK

9. Department of Plankton and Microbial Ecology Leibniz Institute of Freshwater Ecology and Inland Fisheries (IGB) Stechlin Germany

10. Department of Biochemistry and Biology Potsdam University Potsdam Germany

11. Prince Albert National Park Parks Canada Saskatchewan Canada

12. Department of Civil Engineering Universidade da Coruña A Coruña Spain

13. School of Natural Resources University of Missouri‐Columbia Columbia Missouri USA

14. Institute of Arctic and Alpine Research University of Colorado Boulder Colorado USA

15. Environmental Sciences Division, Oak Ridge National Laboratory Oak Ridge Tennessee USA

16. New Hampshire Department of Environmental Services Concord New Hampshire USA

17. Department of Ecology Universität Innsbruck Innsbruck Austria

18. National Institute of Water and Atmospheric Research Wellington New Zealand

19. 7 Lakes Alliance Belgrade Lakes Maine USA

20. Department of Ecology and Genetics/Limnology Uppsala University Uppsala Sweden

Abstract

AbstractDeclining oxygen concentrations in the deep waters of lakes worldwide pose a pressing environmental and societal challenge. Existing theory suggests that low deep‐water dissolved oxygen (DO) concentrations could trigger a positive feedback through which anoxia (i.e., very low DO) during a given summer begets increasingly severe occurrences of anoxia in following summers. Specifically, anoxic conditions can promote nutrient release from sediments, thereby stimulating phytoplankton growth, and subsequent phytoplankton decomposition can fuel heterotrophic respiration, resulting in increased spatial extent and duration of anoxia. However, while the individual relationships in this feedback are well established, to our knowledge, there has not been a systematic analysis within or across lakes that simultaneously demonstrates all of the mechanisms necessary to produce a positive feedback that reinforces anoxia. Here, we compiled data from 656 widespread temperate lakes and reservoirs to analyze the proposed anoxia begets anoxia feedback. Lakes in the dataset span a broad range of surface area (1–126,909 ha), maximum depth (6–370 m), and morphometry, with a median time‐series duration of 30 years at each lake. Using linear mixed models, we found support for each of the positive feedback relationships between anoxia, phosphorus concentrations, chlorophyll a concentrations, and oxygen demand across the 656‐lake dataset. Likewise, we found further support for these relationships by analyzing time‐series data from individual lakes. Our results indicate that the strength of these feedback relationships may vary with lake‐specific characteristics: For example, we found that surface phosphorus concentrations were more positively associated with chlorophyll a in high‐phosphorus lakes, and oxygen demand had a stronger influence on the extent of anoxia in deep lakes. Taken together, these results support the existence of a positive feedback that could magnify the effects of climate change and other anthropogenic pressures driving the development of anoxia in lakes around the world.

Funder

Cornell Atkinson Center for Sustainability, Cornell University

Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft

Institute for Critical Technology and Applied Science

Ministry of Business, Innovation and Employment

National Science Foundation

Natural Environment Research Council

Oak Ridge National Laboratory

Svenska Forskningsrådet Formas

Vetenskapsrådet

Water Power Technologies Office

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

General Environmental Science,Ecology,Environmental Chemistry,Global and Planetary Change

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