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  • 1
    Publication Date: 2021-06-27
    Description: Browning caused by colored dissolved organic matter is predicted to have large effects on aquatic ecosystems. However, there is limited experimental evidence about direct and indirect effects of browning on zooplankton in complex field settings. We used a combination of an ecosystem‐scale enclosure experiment and laboratory incubations to test how prolonged browning affects physiological and life‐history traits of the water flea Daphnia longispina, a key species in lake food webs, and whether any such effects are reversible. Daphnids and water were collected from enclosures in a deep clear‐water lake, where the natural plankton community had been exposed for 10 weeks to browning or to control conditions in clear water. Daphnid abundance was much lower in the brown than in the clear enclosure. Surprisingly, however, daphnids continuously kept in brown enclosure water in the laboratory showed increased metabolic performance and survival, and also produced more offspring than daphnids kept in clear enclosure water. This outcome was related to more and higher‐quality seston in brown compared to clear water. Moreover, daphnids transferred from clear to brown water or vice versa adjusted their nucleic acid and protein contents, as indicators of physiological state, to similar levels as individuals previously exposed to the respective recipient environment, indicating immediate and reversible browning effects on metabolic performance. These results demonstrate the importance of conducting experiments in settings that capture both indirect effects (i.e., emerging from species interactions in communities) and direct effects on individuals for assessing impacts of browning and other environmental changes on lakes.
    Description: German Federal Ministry of Education and Research
    Description: German Research Foundation http://dx.doi.org/10.13039/501100001659
    Description: IGB's Frontiers in Freshwater Science program
    Keywords: 551.9 ; Lake Stechlin ; dissolved organic matter
    Type: article
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  • 2
    Publication Date: 2019-07-17
    Description: Shifts in the timing and magnitude of the spring plankton bloom in response to climate change have been observed across a wide range of aquatic systems. We used meta-analysis to investigate phenological responses of marine and freshwater plankton communities in mesocosms subjected to experimental manipulations of temperature and light intensity. Systems differed with respect to the dominant mesozooplankton (copepods in seawater and daphnids in freshwater). Higher water temperatures advanced the bloom timing of most functional plankton groups in both marine and freshwater systems. In contrast to timing, responses of bloom magnitudes were more variable among taxa and systems and were influenced by light intensity and trophic interactions. Increased light levels increased the magnitude of the spring peaks of most phytoplankton taxa and of total phytoplankton biomass. Intensified size-selective grazing of copepods in warming scenarios affected phytoplankton size structure and lowered intermediate (20–200 lm)-sized phytoplankton in marine systems. In contrast, plankton peak magnitudes in freshwater systems were unaffected by temperature, but decreased at lower light intensities, suggesting that filter feeding daphnids are sensitive to changes in algal carrying capacity as mediated by light supply. Our analysis confirms the general shift toward earlier blooms at increased temperature in both marine and freshwater systems and supports predictions that effects of climate change on plankton production will vary among sites, depending on resource limitation and species composition.
    Repository Name: EPIC Alfred Wegener Institut
    Type: Article , isiRev
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  • 3
    Publication Date: 2021-03-30
    Description: Anthropogenic atmospheric loading of CO2 raises concerns about combined effects of increasing ocean temperature and acidification, on biological processes. In particular, the response of appendicularian zooplankton to climate change may have significant ecosystem implications as they can alter biogeochemical cycling compared to classical copepod dominated food webs. However, the response of appendicularians to multiple climate drivers and effect on carbon cycling are still not well understood. Here, we investigated how gelatinous zooplankton (appendicularians) affect carbon cycling of marine food webs under conditions predicted by future climate scenarios. Appendicularians performed well in warmer conditions and benefited from low pH levels, which in turn altered the direction of carbon flow. Increased appendicularians removed particles from the water column that might otherwise nourish copepods by increasing carbon transport to depth from continuous discarding of filtration houses and fecal pellets. This helps to remove CO2 from the atmosphere, and may also have fisheries implications.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed , info:eu-repo/semantics/article
    Format: text
    Format: text
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  • 4
    Publication Date: 2019-07-09
    Description: Shifts in the timing and magnitude of the spring plankton bloom in response to climate change have been observed across a wide range of aquatic systems. We used meta-analysis to investigate phenological responses of marine and freshwater plankton communities in mesocosms subjected to experimental manipulations of temperature and light intensity. Systems differed with respect to the dominant mesozooplankton (copepods in seawater and daphnids in freshwater). Higher water temperatures advanced the bloom timing of most functional plankton groups in both marine and freshwater systems. In contrast to timing, responses of bloom magnitudes were more variable among taxa and systems and were influenced by light intensity and trophic interactions. Increased light levels increased the magnitude of the spring peaks of most phytoplankton taxa and of total phytoplankton biomass. Intensified size-selective grazing of copepods in warming scenarios affected phytoplankton size structure and lowered intermediate (20–200 μm)-sized phytoplankton in marine systems. In contrast, plankton peak magnitudes in freshwater systems were unaffected by temperature, but decreased at lower light intensities, suggesting that filter feeding daphnids are sensitive to changes in algal carrying capacity as mediated by light supply. Our analysis confirms the general shift toward earlier blooms at increased temperature in both marine and freshwater systems and supports predictions that effects of climate change on plankton production will vary among sites, depending on resource limitation and species composition.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
    Format: text
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  • 5
    Publication Date: 2020-10-26
    Description: Climatic warming is a primary driver of change in ecosystems worldwide. Here, we synthesize responses of species richness and evenness from 187 experimental warming studies in a quantitative meta-analysis. We asked 1) whether effects of warming on diversity were detectable and consistent across terrestrial, freshwater and marine ecosystems, 2) if effects on diversity correlated with intensity, duration, and experimental unit size of temperature change manipulations, and 3) whether these experimental effects on diversity interacted with ecosystem types. Using multilevel mixed linear models and model averaging, we also tested the relative importance of variables that described uncontrolled environmental variation and attributes of experimental units. Overall, experimental warming reduced richness across ecosystems (mean log-response ratio = –0.091, 95% bootstrapped CI: –0.13, –0.05) representing an 8.9% decline relative to ambient temperature treatments. Richness did not change in response to warming in freshwater systems, but was more strongly negative in terrestrial (–11.8%) and marine (–10.5%) experiments. In contrast, warming impacts on evenness were neutral overall and in aquatic systems, but weakly negative on land (7.6%). Intensity and duration of experimental warming did not explain variation in diversity responses, but negative effects on richness were stronger in smaller experimental units, particularly in marine systems. Model-averaged parameter estimation confirmed these main effects while accounting for variation in latitude, ambient temperature at the sites of manipulations, venue (field versus lab), community trophic type, and whether experiments were open or closed to colonization. These analyses synthesize extensive experimental evidence showing declines in local richness with increased temperature, particularly in terrestrial and marine communities. However, the more variable effects of warming on evenness were better explained by the random effect of site identity, suggesting that effects on species’ relative abundances were contingent on local species composition.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
    Format: text
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  • 6
    Publication Date: 2024-02-07
    Description: The relevance of considering environmental variability for understanding and predicting biological responses to environmental changes has resulted in a recent surge in variability-focused ecological research. However, integration of findings that emerge across studies and identification of remaining knowledge gaps in aquatic ecosystems remain critical. Here, we address these aspects by: (1) summarizing relevant terms of variability research including the components (characteristics) of variability and key interactions when considering multiple environmental factors; (2) identifying conceptual frameworks for understanding the consequences of environmental variability in single and multifactorial scenarios; (3) highlighting challenges for bridging theoretical and experimental studies involving transitioning from simple to more complex scenarios; (4) proposing improved approaches to overcome current mismatches between theoretical predictions and experimental observations; and (5) providing a guide for designing integrated experiments across multiple scales, degrees of control, and complexity in light of their specific strengths and limitations.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed , info:eu-repo/semantics/article
    Format: text
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  • 7
    Publication Date: 2023-12-16
    Keywords: Blue-green algae; Chlorophyll total; Comment; Cryptophyta, biomass; DATE/TIME; DEPTH, water; Diatoms, biomass; Event label; Fluorometer, bbe Moldaenke GmbH, FluoroProbe; Germany; Green algae; Inland Water Remote Sensing Validation Campaign 2017; IWRSVC-2017; Kelbra-0803_BBE_FP1; Kelbra-0855_BBE_FP1; Kelbra-0901_BBE_FP1; Kelbra-0921_BBE_FP1; Kelbra-0954_BBE_FP1; Kelbra-1015_BBE_FP1; Kelbra-1057_BBE_FP1; Kelbra-1101_BBE_FP1; Kelbra-1125_BBE_FP1; Kelbra-1132_BBE_FP1; Kelbra-1134_BBE_FP1; Kelbra-1140_BBE_FP1; Kelbra-1154_BBE_FP1; Principal investigator; Temperature, water; Transmission of light; Yellow substance
    Type: Dataset
    Format: text/tab-separated-values, 7320 data points
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  • 8
    Publication Date: 2023-12-16
    Keywords: Date/time end; Date/time start; Dew/frost point; Digital air-humidity/temperature/pressure sensor, Ahlborn, FHAD 36 RAS; Event label; Germany; Humidity, relative; Inland Water Remote Sensing Validation Campaign 2017; IWRSVC-2017; Kelbra-0840_MPS; Kelbra-0905_MPS; Kelbra-1000_MPS; Kelbra-1004_MPS; Kelbra-1100_MPS; Kelbra-1154_MPS; Multiparameter sensor, Ahlborn, ALMEMO D6; Pressure, atmospheric; Principal investigator; Temperature, air; Wind direction; Wind speed
    Type: Dataset
    Format: text/tab-separated-values, 57 data points
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  • 9
    Publication Date: 2023-12-16
    Keywords: Chlorophyll a; Conductivity, electrical; Cyanobacteria; DATE/TIME; DEPTH, water; Depth of maximum transparency; Event label; Germany; Inland Water Remote Sensing Validation Campaign 2017; IWRSVC-2017; Multiparameter water quality sonde, YSI Inc., YSI 6600; Oxygen saturation; pH; Principal investigator; Scale; Suessersee-0849_YSI1; Suessersee-0955_YSI1; Suessersee-1147_YSI1; Temperature, water; Turbidity (Nephelometric turbidity unit)
    Type: Dataset
    Format: text/tab-separated-values, 2193 data points
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  • 10
    Publication Date: 2023-12-16
    Keywords: Blue-green algae; Chlorophyll total; Cryptophyta, biomass; DATE/TIME; DEPTH, water; Diatoms, biomass; Event label; Fluorometer, bbe Moldaenke GmbH, FluoroProbe; Germany; Green algae; Inland Water Remote Sensing Validation Campaign 2017; IWRSVC-2017; Principal investigator; Suessersee-0857_BBE_FP1; Suessersee-0929_BBE_FP1; Suessersee-0958_BBE_FP1; Suessersee-1123_BBE_FP1; Suessersee-1158_BBE_FP1; Temperature, water; Transmission of light; Yellow substance
    Type: Dataset
    Format: text/tab-separated-values, 3159 data points
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