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A comparative examination of recent changes in nutrients and lower food web structure in Lake Michigan and Lake Huron
Authors:Richard P. Barbiero  Barry M. Lesht  Glenn J. Warren  Lars G. Rudstam  James M. Watkins  Euan D. Reavie  Katya E. Kovalenko  Alexander Y. Karatayev
Affiliation:1. CSRA, 1359 W. Elmdale Ave. Suite 2, Chicago, IL 60660, USA;2. CSRA and Department of Earth and Environmental Sciences, University of Illinois at Chicago, 845 W. Taylor St., Chicago, IL 60607, USA;3. USEPA Great Lakes National Program Office, 77 W. Jackson Boulevard, Chicago, IL 60604, USA;4. Department of Natural Resources, Cornell University Biological Field Station, 900 Shackelton Point Road, Bridgeport, NY 13030, USA;5. Natural Resources Research Institute, University of Minnesota Duluth, 5013 Miller Trunk Hwy, Duluth, MN 55811, USA;6. Great Lakes Center, Buffalo State College, Buffalo, NY, USA
Abstract:The lower food webs of Lake Huron and Lake Michigan have experienced similar reductions in the spring phytoplankton bloom and summer populations of Diporeia and cladocerans since the early 2000s. At the same time phosphorus concentrations have decreased and water clarity and silica concentrations have increased. Key periods of change, identified by using a method based on sequential t-tests, were 2003–2005 (Huron) and 2004–2006 (Michigan). Estimated filtration capacity suggests that dreissenid grazing would have been insufficient to directly impact phytoplankton in the deeper waters of either lake by this time (mid 2000s). Despite some evidence of decreased chlorophyll:TP ratios, consistent with grazing limitation of phytoplankton, the main impact of dreissenids on the offshore waters was probably remote, e.g., through interception of nutrients by nearshore populations. A mass balance model indicates that decreased phosphorus loading could not account for observed in-lake phosphorus declines. However, model-inferred internal phosphorus dynamics were strongly correlated between the lakes, with periods of increased internal loading in the 1990s, and increased phosphorus loss starting in 2000 in Lake Michigan and 2003 in Lake Huron, prior to dreissenid expansion into deep water of both lakes. This suggests a limited role for deep populations of dreissenids in the initial phosphorus declines in the lakes, and also suggests a role for meteorological influence on phosphorus dynamics. The high synchrony in lower trophic level changes between Lake Michigan and Lake Huron suggests that both lakes should be considered when investigating underlying causal factors of these changes.
Keywords:Phosphorus  Chlorophyll  Zooplankton  Lake Huron  Lake Michigan
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