PREFACE TO SPECIAL THEME, PART 1: Toward a better understanding of Lake Simcoe through integrative and collaborative monitoring and research

This special section of Inland Waters features the first of numerous papers that highlight trends and insights emerging from decades of ecological monitoring and research activities on Lake Simcoe, Canada. Lake Simcoe is the largest lake in southern Ontario after the Laurentian Great Lakes. Like mos...

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Main Authors: Michelle Elaine Palmer, Véronique P Hiriart-Baer, Rebecca L North, Michael D Rennie
Language:English
Published: Freshwater Biological Association 2013
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.fba.org.uk/journals/index.php/IW/article/view/589
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author Michelle Elaine Palmer
Véronique P Hiriart-Baer
Rebecca L North
Michael D Rennie
author_facet Michelle Elaine Palmer
Véronique P Hiriart-Baer
Rebecca L North
Michael D Rennie
author_sort Michelle Elaine Palmer
collection Unknown
description This special section of Inland Waters features the first of numerous papers that highlight trends and insights emerging from decades of ecological monitoring and research activities on Lake Simcoe, Canada. Lake Simcoe is the largest lake in southern Ontario after the Laurentian Great Lakes. Like most large lakes, Simcoe has been negatively impacted over the past century by human activities, which accelerated dramatically around the 1930s (Hawryshyn et al. 2012). Phosphorus (P) loading from point and nonpoint sources caused excessive growth of plants and algae that consume hypolimnetic oxygen during decomposition, which limited coldwater fish habitat and contributed to the recruitment failure of popular sportfish such as lake trout (Salvelinus namaycush) and lake whitefish (Coregonus clupeaformis; Evans et al. 1996). The establishment in recent decades of invasive fish, invertebrates, and plants is changing lake habitat, food webs, and native species dynamics (Evans et al. 2011, Ginn 2011, Ozersky et al. 2011). Increasing air temperature associated with climate change has prolonged thermal stratification and shortened the period of ice cover (OMOE et al. 2009, Stainsby et al. 2011). Metals and organic pollutants originating from urban and industrial sources have accumulated in lake and tributary sediments (Helm et al. 2011, Landre et al. 2011), potentially affecting aquatic biota and increasing the risk associated with human fish consumption (Gewurtz et al. 2011, Lembcke et al. 2011). Additionally, the cumulative effects of these and other stressors have drastically altered aquatic communities (Depew et al. 2011, Ginn 2011, Jimenez et al. 2011, Winter et al. 2011).In response to public concern about the ecological health of the lake, the Lake Simcoe Protection Act was approved by the Government of Ontario in 2008 with a mandate to protect and restore the Lake Simcoe watershed (Government of Ontario 2008). The Act established the Lake Simcoe Protection Plan (LSPP; OMOE et al. 2009) that identifies a number of targets and indicators to characterize environmental health in the Lake Simcoe watershed and details 119 policies and actions to achieve these targets. Scientific monitoring and research play an integral role in the success of the LSPP, which supports an ecosystem approach to informing policies and actions, taking into account the interconnectedness of the lake and watershed. The LSPP mandates the enhancement of current monitoring programs, development of new monitoring programs, and the promotion and implementation of research projects that build upon existing science to continually update management decisions as part of an adaptive management approach.The challenges posed by the LSPP necessitate collaborative research efforts and sharing of responsibilities, resources, and knowledge among federal, provincial, and local governments, academics, conservation authorities, agricultural, commercial, and industrial sectors, First Nations communities, the general public, and other stakeholders. The collection of papers shows the value of a collaborative approach and demonstrates how strong partnerships can facilitate integrative approaches to scientific monitoring and research efforts being used to protect Lake Simcoe.
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op_rights The submitting author (or their employer, if the author is not entitled to do so) will be required to check a box indicating that they have read, understood and accept the terms of this Copyright Notice. Author's declaration This article is submitted for publication in Inland Waters by me. I, the author (or his/her employer) confirm that: this article has not been published previously and it is not being considered for publication elsewhere, either in whole or substantial part; all persons entitled to authorship have been so included; all authors have read the submitted manuscript and approve its submission; the work conforms to the legal requirements of the country in which it was carried out, including those relating to conservation and welfare. Copyright to the above work (including all original text, photographs, images, tables and graphs*) is hereby transferred to the International Society of Limnology (SIL). I confirm that I have suitable rights to all content* and am legally permitted to transfer ownership to SIL. I accept responsibility for transferring copyright on behalf of any co-authors. * Excepting content for which I do not own the copyright but have obtained the necessary permission to reproduce. (Note: evidence of such permissions must be uploaded during step four of the submission process (Supplementary Files)). Rights of authors, publication, and permissions to reproduce The author retains the right to: display the submitted version of the manuscript (as first submitted to Inland Waters, prior to peer review), and/or the abstract only of the published article, on their personal/academic website(s); use (and permit others to use) the submitted version within their own organisation for non-commercial uses, e.g. for teaching purposes provided it is clearly stated that the manuscript is unpublished, and full bibliographic reference to the published article is given. Recommended text: Unpublished manuscript [if applicable]. The full text of this article
op_source Inland Waters; Vol 3, No 1 (2013); 47-50
publishDate 2013
publisher Freshwater Biological Association
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spelling ftfbaojs:oai:ojs.pkp.sfu.ca:article/589 2025-01-16T21:57:13+00:00 PREFACE TO SPECIAL THEME, PART 1: Toward a better understanding of Lake Simcoe through integrative and collaborative monitoring and research Michelle Elaine Palmer Véronique P Hiriart-Baer Rebecca L North Michael D Rennie Lake Simcoe; Ontario; Canada 2013-01-28 application/pdf https://www.fba.org.uk/journals/index.php/IW/article/view/589 en eng Freshwater Biological Association The submitting author (or their employer, if the author is not entitled to do so) will be required to check a box indicating that they have read, understood and accept the terms of this Copyright Notice. Author's declaration This article is submitted for publication in Inland Waters by me. I, the author (or his/her employer) confirm that: this article has not been published previously and it is not being considered for publication elsewhere, either in whole or substantial part; all persons entitled to authorship have been so included; all authors have read the submitted manuscript and approve its submission; the work conforms to the legal requirements of the country in which it was carried out, including those relating to conservation and welfare. Copyright to the above work (including all original text, photographs, images, tables and graphs*) is hereby transferred to the International Society of Limnology (SIL). I confirm that I have suitable rights to all content* and am legally permitted to transfer ownership to SIL. I accept responsibility for transferring copyright on behalf of any co-authors. * Excepting content for which I do not own the copyright but have obtained the necessary permission to reproduce. (Note: evidence of such permissions must be uploaded during step four of the submission process (Supplementary Files)). Rights of authors, publication, and permissions to reproduce The author retains the right to: display the submitted version of the manuscript (as first submitted to Inland Waters, prior to peer review), and/or the abstract only of the published article, on their personal/academic website(s); use (and permit others to use) the submitted version within their own organisation for non-commercial uses, e.g. for teaching purposes provided it is clearly stated that the manuscript is unpublished, and full bibliographic reference to the published article is given. Recommended text: Unpublished manuscript [if applicable]. The full text of this article Inland Waters; Vol 3, No 1 (2013); 47-50 Lake Simcoe 2013 ftfbaojs 2019-09-01T07:51:02Z This special section of Inland Waters features the first of numerous papers that highlight trends and insights emerging from decades of ecological monitoring and research activities on Lake Simcoe, Canada. Lake Simcoe is the largest lake in southern Ontario after the Laurentian Great Lakes. Like most large lakes, Simcoe has been negatively impacted over the past century by human activities, which accelerated dramatically around the 1930s (Hawryshyn et al. 2012). Phosphorus (P) loading from point and nonpoint sources caused excessive growth of plants and algae that consume hypolimnetic oxygen during decomposition, which limited coldwater fish habitat and contributed to the recruitment failure of popular sportfish such as lake trout (Salvelinus namaycush) and lake whitefish (Coregonus clupeaformis; Evans et al. 1996). The establishment in recent decades of invasive fish, invertebrates, and plants is changing lake habitat, food webs, and native species dynamics (Evans et al. 2011, Ginn 2011, Ozersky et al. 2011). Increasing air temperature associated with climate change has prolonged thermal stratification and shortened the period of ice cover (OMOE et al. 2009, Stainsby et al. 2011). Metals and organic pollutants originating from urban and industrial sources have accumulated in lake and tributary sediments (Helm et al. 2011, Landre et al. 2011), potentially affecting aquatic biota and increasing the risk associated with human fish consumption (Gewurtz et al. 2011, Lembcke et al. 2011). Additionally, the cumulative effects of these and other stressors have drastically altered aquatic communities (Depew et al. 2011, Ginn 2011, Jimenez et al. 2011, Winter et al. 2011).In response to public concern about the ecological health of the lake, the Lake Simcoe Protection Act was approved by the Government of Ontario in 2008 with a mandate to protect and restore the Lake Simcoe watershed (Government of Ontario 2008). The Act established the Lake Simcoe Protection Plan (LSPP; OMOE et al. 2009) that identifies a number of targets and indicators to characterize environmental health in the Lake Simcoe watershed and details 119 policies and actions to achieve these targets. Scientific monitoring and research play an integral role in the success of the LSPP, which supports an ecosystem approach to informing policies and actions, taking into account the interconnectedness of the lake and watershed. The LSPP mandates the enhancement of current monitoring programs, development of new monitoring programs, and the promotion and implementation of research projects that build upon existing science to continually update management decisions as part of an adaptive management approach.The challenges posed by the LSPP necessitate collaborative research efforts and sharing of responsibilities, resources, and knowledge among federal, provincial, and local governments, academics, conservation authorities, agricultural, commercial, and industrial sectors, First Nations communities, the general public, and other stakeholders. The collection of papers shows the value of a collaborative approach and demonstrates how strong partnerships can facilitate integrative approaches to scientific monitoring and research efforts being used to protect Lake Simcoe. Other/Unknown Material First Nations Unknown Canada Changing Lake ENVELOPE(-45.619,-45.619,-60.708,-60.708) Landre ENVELOPE(7.467,7.467,62.626,62.626)
spellingShingle Lake Simcoe
Michelle Elaine Palmer
Véronique P Hiriart-Baer
Rebecca L North
Michael D Rennie
PREFACE TO SPECIAL THEME, PART 1: Toward a better understanding of Lake Simcoe through integrative and collaborative monitoring and research
title PREFACE TO SPECIAL THEME, PART 1: Toward a better understanding of Lake Simcoe through integrative and collaborative monitoring and research
title_full PREFACE TO SPECIAL THEME, PART 1: Toward a better understanding of Lake Simcoe through integrative and collaborative monitoring and research
title_fullStr PREFACE TO SPECIAL THEME, PART 1: Toward a better understanding of Lake Simcoe through integrative and collaborative monitoring and research
title_full_unstemmed PREFACE TO SPECIAL THEME, PART 1: Toward a better understanding of Lake Simcoe through integrative and collaborative monitoring and research
title_short PREFACE TO SPECIAL THEME, PART 1: Toward a better understanding of Lake Simcoe through integrative and collaborative monitoring and research
title_sort preface to special theme, part 1: toward a better understanding of lake simcoe through integrative and collaborative monitoring and research
topic Lake Simcoe
topic_facet Lake Simcoe
url https://www.fba.org.uk/journals/index.php/IW/article/view/589