Managing ecosystems without prior knowledge: pathological outcomes of lake liming

Management actions often need to be taken in the absence of ecological information to mitigate the impact of pressing environmental problems. Managers counteracted the detrimental effects of cultural acidification on aquatic ecosystems during the industrial era using liming to salvage biodiversity a...

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Main Authors: David G. Angeler, Stina Drakare, Richard K. Johnson, Stephan Köhler, Tobias Vrede
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Resilience Alliance 2017-12-01
Series:Ecology and Society
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.ecologyandsociety.org/vol22/iss4/art44/
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spelling doaj-8ec39429b24249f9ad0f2801ea4b91f42020-11-24T23:07:06ZengResilience AllianceEcology and Society1708-30872017-12-012244410.5751/ES-09794-2204449794Managing ecosystems without prior knowledge: pathological outcomes of lake limingDavid G. Angeler0Stina Drakare1Richard K. Johnson2Stephan Köhler3Tobias Vrede4Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences, Department of Aquatic Sciences and AssessmentSwedish University of Agricultural Sciences, Department of Aquatic Sciences and AssessmentSwedish University of Agricultural Sciences, Department of Aquatic Sciences and AssessmentSwedish University of Agricultural Sciences, Department of Aquatic Sciences and AssessmentSwedish University of Agricultural Sciences, Department of Aquatic Sciences and AssessmentManagement actions often need to be taken in the absence of ecological information to mitigate the impact of pressing environmental problems. Managers counteracted the detrimental effects of cultural acidification on aquatic ecosystems during the industrial era using liming to salvage biodiversity and ecosystem services. However, historical contingencies, i.e., whether lakes were naturally acidic or degraded because of acidification, were largely unknown and therefore not accounted for in management. It is uncertain whether liming outcomes had a potentially detrimental effect on naturally acidic lakes. Evidence from paleolimnological reconstructions allowed us to analyze community structure in limed acidified and naturally acidic lakes, and acidified and circumneutral references. We analyzed community structure of phytoplankton, zooplankton, macroinvertebrates (littoral, sublittoral, profundal), and fish between 2000 and 2004. Naturally acidic limed lakes formed communities that were not representative of the other lake types. The occurrence of fish species relevant for ecosystem service provisioning (fisheries potential) in naturally acidic limed lakes were confounded by biogeographical factors. In addition, sustained changes in water quality were conducive to harmful algal blooms. This highlights a pathological outcome of liming lakes when their naturally acidic conditions are not accounted for. Because liming is an important social-ecological system, sustained ecological change of lakes might incur undesired costs for societies in the long term.http://www.ecologyandsociety.org/vol22/iss4/art44/biodiversitycommunity structureecosystem historyfishinvertebrateslakeslimingmanagementphytoplanktonzooplankton
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author David G. Angeler
Stina Drakare
Richard K. Johnson
Stephan Köhler
Tobias Vrede
spellingShingle David G. Angeler
Stina Drakare
Richard K. Johnson
Stephan Köhler
Tobias Vrede
Managing ecosystems without prior knowledge: pathological outcomes of lake liming
Ecology and Society
biodiversity
community structure
ecosystem history
fish
invertebrates
lakes
liming
management
phytoplankton
zooplankton
author_facet David G. Angeler
Stina Drakare
Richard K. Johnson
Stephan Köhler
Tobias Vrede
author_sort David G. Angeler
title Managing ecosystems without prior knowledge: pathological outcomes of lake liming
title_short Managing ecosystems without prior knowledge: pathological outcomes of lake liming
title_full Managing ecosystems without prior knowledge: pathological outcomes of lake liming
title_fullStr Managing ecosystems without prior knowledge: pathological outcomes of lake liming
title_full_unstemmed Managing ecosystems without prior knowledge: pathological outcomes of lake liming
title_sort managing ecosystems without prior knowledge: pathological outcomes of lake liming
publisher Resilience Alliance
series Ecology and Society
issn 1708-3087
publishDate 2017-12-01
description Management actions often need to be taken in the absence of ecological information to mitigate the impact of pressing environmental problems. Managers counteracted the detrimental effects of cultural acidification on aquatic ecosystems during the industrial era using liming to salvage biodiversity and ecosystem services. However, historical contingencies, i.e., whether lakes were naturally acidic or degraded because of acidification, were largely unknown and therefore not accounted for in management. It is uncertain whether liming outcomes had a potentially detrimental effect on naturally acidic lakes. Evidence from paleolimnological reconstructions allowed us to analyze community structure in limed acidified and naturally acidic lakes, and acidified and circumneutral references. We analyzed community structure of phytoplankton, zooplankton, macroinvertebrates (littoral, sublittoral, profundal), and fish between 2000 and 2004. Naturally acidic limed lakes formed communities that were not representative of the other lake types. The occurrence of fish species relevant for ecosystem service provisioning (fisheries potential) in naturally acidic limed lakes were confounded by biogeographical factors. In addition, sustained changes in water quality were conducive to harmful algal blooms. This highlights a pathological outcome of liming lakes when their naturally acidic conditions are not accounted for. Because liming is an important social-ecological system, sustained ecological change of lakes might incur undesired costs for societies in the long term.
topic biodiversity
community structure
ecosystem history
fish
invertebrates
lakes
liming
management
phytoplankton
zooplankton
url http://www.ecologyandsociety.org/vol22/iss4/art44/
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