Zooplankton (Cladocera) species turnover and long-term decline of Daphnia in two high mountain lakes in the Austrian Alps
We investigated long-term succession of sedimentary cladoceran assemblages in two morphologically divergent mountain lakes by utilizing sediment traps and previously available sediment data. We aimed to detect lake-specific changes in pelagic communities potentially attributable to climate warming u...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Hydrobiologia 2014-01, Vol.722 (1), p.75-91 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | We investigated long-term succession of sedimentary cladoceran assemblages in two morphologically divergent mountain lakes by utilizing sediment traps and previously available sediment data. We aimed to detect lake-specific changes in pelagic communities potentially attributable to climate warming under the presumption that lakes and biotic communities may respond individually to the same regional climatic forcing. Both lakes showed a similar community turnover, as
Daphnia
was first replaced by
Chydorus
cf.
sphaericus
and during the twentieth century by the latest colonizer
Bosmina
. The community succession was similar among the lakes and consistent with the regional temperature increase, although the timing of community shift, the magnitude of change, and taxa in question differed. Decline of
Daphnia
mismatched with historical fish stockings, but the eventual extirpation of
Daphnia
in one of the lakes corresponded to the start of fish introductions. We propose that the observed shifts were mainly governed by increasing temperatures and its limnoecological consequences (e.g., deeper mixing). We suggest that
Bosmina
distribution may be extending to lakes at higher altitudes as a response to climate warming, and that it may replace
Daphnia
as the key component of pelagic alpine food webs by coping in interspecific resource competition under changed limnological regimes. |
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ISSN: | 0018-8158 1573-5117 |
DOI: | 10.1007/s10750-013-1676-5 |