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Sentinel responses of Arctic freshwater systems to climate: linkages, evidence, and a roadmap for future research

Authors :
Saros, Jasmine E
Saros, Jasmine E
Arp, Christopher D
Bouchard, Frédéric
Comte, Jérôme
Couture, Raoul-Marie
Dean, Joshua F
Lafrenière, Melissa
MacIntyre, Sally
McGowan, Suzanne
Rautio, Milla
Prater, Clay
Tank, Suzanne E
Walvoord, Michelle
Wickland, Kimberly P
Antoniades, Dermot
Ayala-Borda, Paola
Canario, Joao
Drake, Travis W
Folhas, Diogo
Hazuková, Václava
Kivilä, Henriikka
Klanten, Yohanna
Lamoureux, Scott
Laurion, Isabelle
Pilla, Rachel M
Vonk, Jorien E
Zolkos, Scott
Vincent, Warwick F
Saros, Jasmine E
Saros, Jasmine E
Arp, Christopher D
Bouchard, Frédéric
Comte, Jérôme
Couture, Raoul-Marie
Dean, Joshua F
Lafrenière, Melissa
MacIntyre, Sally
McGowan, Suzanne
Rautio, Milla
Prater, Clay
Tank, Suzanne E
Walvoord, Michelle
Wickland, Kimberly P
Antoniades, Dermot
Ayala-Borda, Paola
Canario, Joao
Drake, Travis W
Folhas, Diogo
Hazuková, Václava
Kivilä, Henriikka
Klanten, Yohanna
Lamoureux, Scott
Laurion, Isabelle
Pilla, Rachel M
Vonk, Jorien E
Zolkos, Scott
Vincent, Warwick F
Source :
Arctic Science; vol 9, iss 2, 356-392; 2368-7460
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

While the sentinel nature of freshwater systems is now well recognized, widespread integration of freshwater processes and patterns into our understanding of broader climate-driven Arctic terrestrial ecosystem change has been slow. We review the current understanding across Arctic freshwater systems of key sentinel responses to climate, which are attributes of these systems with demonstrated and sensitive responses to climate forcing. These include ice regimes, temperature and thermal structure, river baseflow, lake area and water level, permafrost-derived dissolved ions and nutrients, carbon mobilization (dissolved organic carbon, greenhouse gases, and radiocarbon), dissolved oxygen concentrations, lake trophic state, various aquatic organisms and their traits, and invasive species. For each sentinel, our objectives are to clarify linkages to climate, describe key insights already gained, and provide suggestions for future research based on current knowledge gaps. We suggest that tracking key responses in Arctic freshwater systems will expand understanding of the breadth and depth of climate-driven Arctic ecosystem changes, provide early indicators of looming, broader changes across the landscape, and improve protection of freshwater biodiversity and resources.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Journal :
Arctic Science; vol 9, iss 2, 356-392; 2368-7460
Notes :
application/pdf, Arctic Science vol 9, iss 2, 356-392 2368-7460
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1391575722
Document Type :
Electronic Resource