Major changes in fish thermal habitat diversity in Canada’s Arctic lakes due to climate change

Abstract Climate warming is a major disruptor of fish community structure globally. We use large-scale geospatial analyses of 447,077 Canadian Arctic lakes to predict how climate change would impact lake thermal habitat diversity across the Arctic landscape. Increases in maximum surface temperature...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Communications Earth & Environment
Main Authors: Daniel P. Gillis, Charles K. Minns, Steven E. Campana, Brian J. Shuter
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Nature Portfolio 2024
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Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1038/s43247-024-01251-8
https://doaj.org/article/e0ce96ca3e224255acff3192357acdf3
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Summary:Abstract Climate warming is a major disruptor of fish community structure globally. We use large-scale geospatial analyses of 447,077 Canadian Arctic lakes to predict how climate change would impact lake thermal habitat diversity across the Arctic landscape. Increases in maximum surface temperature (+2.4–6.7 °C), ice-free period (+14–38 days), and thermal stratification presence (+4.2–18.9%) occur under all climate scenarios. Lakes, currently fishless due to deep winter ice, open up; many thermally uniform lakes become thermally diverse. Resilient coldwater habitat supply is predicted; however, thermally diverse lakes shift from providing almost exclusively coldwater habitat to providing substantial coolwater habitat and previously absent warmwater habitat. Across terrestrial ecozones, most lakes exhibit major shifts in thermal habitat. The prevalence of thermally diverse lakes more than doubles, providing refuge for coldwater taxa. Ecozone-specific differences in the distribution of thermally diverse and thermally uniform lakes require different management strategies for adapting fish resource use to climate change.