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Anticipated impacts of climate change on the structure and function of phytobenthos in freshwater lakes.

Authors :
Lengyel, Edina
Stenger-Kovács, Csilla
Boros, Gergely
Al-Imari, Tiba Jassam Kaison
Novák, Zoltán
Bernát, Gábor
Source :
Environmental Research. Dec2023:Part 2, Vol. 238, pN.PAG-N.PAG. 1p.
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

Climate change threatens surface waters worldwide, especially shallow lakes where one of the expected consequences is a sharp increase in their water temperatures. Phytobenthos is an essential, but still less studied component of aquatic ecosystems, and it would be important to learn more about how global warming will affect this community in shallow lakes. In this research, the effects of different climate change scenarios (SSP2-4.5 and SSP5-8.5, as intermediate and high emission scenarios) on the structure and function of the entire phytobenthos community using species- and trait-based approaches were experimentally investigated in an outdoor mesocosm system. Our results show that the forecasted 3 °C increase in temperature will already exert significant impacts on the benthic algal community by (1) altering its species and (2) trait composition (smaller cell size, lower abundance of colonial and higher of filamentous forms); (3) decreasing Shannon diversity; and (4) enhancing the variability of the community. Higher increase in the temperature (+5 °C) will imply more drastic alterations in freshwater phytobenthos by (1) inducing very high variability in species composition and compositional changes even in phylum level (towards higher abundance of Cyanobacteria and Chlorophyta at the expense of Bacillariophyta); (2) continuing shift in trait composition (benefits for smaller cell volume, filamentous life-forms, non-motile and weakly attached taxa); (3) further reducing the functional diversity; (4) increasing biofilm thickness (1.4 μm/°C) and (5) decreasing maximum quantum yield of photosystem II. In conclusion, already the intermediate emission scenario will predictably induce high risk in biodiversity issues, the high emission scenario will imply drastic impacts on the benthic algae endangering even the function of the ecosystem. [Display omitted] • Climate change threatens shallow lakes, whose phytobenthos is still less studied. • Even a moderate warming (+3 °C) may cause decline in biodiversity of this community. • Worst-case scenario (+5 °C) may result also in loss in its functional properties. • Global warming may favour Cyanobacteria and Chlorophyta at the expense of diatoms. • Global warming may favour small, filamentous, non-motile, weakly attached taxa. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00139351
Volume :
238
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Environmental Research
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
173725909
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.envres.2023.117283