Biodiversity patterns of Arctic diatom assemblages in lakes and streams: Current reference conditions and historical context for biomonitoring

1.Comprehensive assessments of contemporary diatom distributions across the Arctic remain scarce. Furthermore, studies tracking species compositional differences across space and time, as well as diatom responses to climate warming, are mainly limited to paleolimnological studies due to a lack of ro...

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Published in:Freshwater Biology
Main Authors: Kahlert, Maria, Ruhland, Kathleen M, Lavoie, Isabelle, Keck, Francois, Saulnier-Talbot, Emilie, Bogan, Daniel, Brua, Robert B, Campeau, Stephane, Christoffersen, Kirsten Seestern, Culp, Joseph M, Karjalainen, Satu Maaria, Lento, Jennifer, Schneider, Susanne Claudia, Shaftel, Rebecca, Smol, John P.
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/11250/2660718
https://doi.org/10.1111/fwb.13490
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spelling ftnorskinstvf:oai:niva.brage.unit.no:11250/2660718 2023-05-15T14:33:31+02:00 Biodiversity patterns of Arctic diatom assemblages in lakes and streams: Current reference conditions and historical context for biomonitoring Kahlert, Maria Ruhland, Kathleen M Lavoie, Isabelle Keck, Francois Saulnier-Talbot, Emilie Bogan, Daniel Brua, Robert B Campeau, Stephane Christoffersen, Kirsten Seestern Culp, Joseph M Karjalainen, Satu Maaria Lento, Jennifer Schneider, Susanne Claudia Shaftel, Rebecca Smol, John P. 2020 application/pdf https://hdl.handle.net/11250/2660718 https://doi.org/10.1111/fwb.13490 eng eng Wiley Freshwater Biology. 2020, 1-25. urn:issn:0046-5070 https://hdl.handle.net/11250/2660718 https://doi.org/10.1111/fwb.13490 cristin:1812663 Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 Internasjonal http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/deed.no © 2020 The Authors CC-BY-NC-ND 1-25 Freshwater Biology Peer reviewed Journal article 2020 ftnorskinstvf https://doi.org/10.1111/fwb.13490 2023-02-21T08:45:53Z 1.Comprehensive assessments of contemporary diatom distributions across the Arctic remain scarce. Furthermore, studies tracking species compositional differences across space and time, as well as diatom responses to climate warming, are mainly limited to paleolimnological studies due to a lack of routine monitoring in lakes and streams across vast areas of the Arctic. 2.The study aims to provide a spatial assessment of contemporary species distributions across the circum‐Arctic, establish contemporary biodiversity patterns of diatom assemblages to use as reference conditions for future biomonitoring assessments, and determine pre‐industrial baseline conditions to provide historical context for modern diatom distributions. 3.Diatom assemblages were assessed using information from ongoing regulatory monitoring programmes, individual research projects, and from surface sediment layers obtained from lake cores. Pre‐industrial baseline conditions as well as the nature, direction and magnitude of changes in diatom assemblages over the past c. 200 years were determined by comparing surface sediment samples (i.e. containing modern assemblages) with a sediment interval deposited prior to the onset of significant anthropogenic activities (i.e. containing pre‐1850 assemblages), together with an examination of diatoms preserved in contiguous samples from dated sediment cores. 4.We identified several biotypes with distinct diatom assemblages using contemporary diatom data from both lakes and streams, including a biotype typical for High Arctic regions. Differences in diatom assemblage composition across circum‐Arctic regions were gradual rather than abrupt. Species richness was lowest in High Arctic regions compared to Low Arctic and sub‐Arctic regions, and higher in lakes than in streams. Dominant diatom taxa were not endemic to the Arctic. Species richness in both lakes and streams reached maximum values between 60°N and 75°N but was highly variable, probably reflecting differences in local and regional environmental ... Article in Journal/Newspaper Arctic Norwegian Institute for Water research: NIVA Open Access Archive (Brage) Arctic Freshwater Biology
institution Open Polar
collection Norwegian Institute for Water research: NIVA Open Access Archive (Brage)
op_collection_id ftnorskinstvf
language English
description 1.Comprehensive assessments of contemporary diatom distributions across the Arctic remain scarce. Furthermore, studies tracking species compositional differences across space and time, as well as diatom responses to climate warming, are mainly limited to paleolimnological studies due to a lack of routine monitoring in lakes and streams across vast areas of the Arctic. 2.The study aims to provide a spatial assessment of contemporary species distributions across the circum‐Arctic, establish contemporary biodiversity patterns of diatom assemblages to use as reference conditions for future biomonitoring assessments, and determine pre‐industrial baseline conditions to provide historical context for modern diatom distributions. 3.Diatom assemblages were assessed using information from ongoing regulatory monitoring programmes, individual research projects, and from surface sediment layers obtained from lake cores. Pre‐industrial baseline conditions as well as the nature, direction and magnitude of changes in diatom assemblages over the past c. 200 years were determined by comparing surface sediment samples (i.e. containing modern assemblages) with a sediment interval deposited prior to the onset of significant anthropogenic activities (i.e. containing pre‐1850 assemblages), together with an examination of diatoms preserved in contiguous samples from dated sediment cores. 4.We identified several biotypes with distinct diatom assemblages using contemporary diatom data from both lakes and streams, including a biotype typical for High Arctic regions. Differences in diatom assemblage composition across circum‐Arctic regions were gradual rather than abrupt. Species richness was lowest in High Arctic regions compared to Low Arctic and sub‐Arctic regions, and higher in lakes than in streams. Dominant diatom taxa were not endemic to the Arctic. Species richness in both lakes and streams reached maximum values between 60°N and 75°N but was highly variable, probably reflecting differences in local and regional environmental ...
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Kahlert, Maria
Ruhland, Kathleen M
Lavoie, Isabelle
Keck, Francois
Saulnier-Talbot, Emilie
Bogan, Daniel
Brua, Robert B
Campeau, Stephane
Christoffersen, Kirsten Seestern
Culp, Joseph M
Karjalainen, Satu Maaria
Lento, Jennifer
Schneider, Susanne Claudia
Shaftel, Rebecca
Smol, John P.
spellingShingle Kahlert, Maria
Ruhland, Kathleen M
Lavoie, Isabelle
Keck, Francois
Saulnier-Talbot, Emilie
Bogan, Daniel
Brua, Robert B
Campeau, Stephane
Christoffersen, Kirsten Seestern
Culp, Joseph M
Karjalainen, Satu Maaria
Lento, Jennifer
Schneider, Susanne Claudia
Shaftel, Rebecca
Smol, John P.
Biodiversity patterns of Arctic diatom assemblages in lakes and streams: Current reference conditions and historical context for biomonitoring
author_facet Kahlert, Maria
Ruhland, Kathleen M
Lavoie, Isabelle
Keck, Francois
Saulnier-Talbot, Emilie
Bogan, Daniel
Brua, Robert B
Campeau, Stephane
Christoffersen, Kirsten Seestern
Culp, Joseph M
Karjalainen, Satu Maaria
Lento, Jennifer
Schneider, Susanne Claudia
Shaftel, Rebecca
Smol, John P.
author_sort Kahlert, Maria
title Biodiversity patterns of Arctic diatom assemblages in lakes and streams: Current reference conditions and historical context for biomonitoring
title_short Biodiversity patterns of Arctic diatom assemblages in lakes and streams: Current reference conditions and historical context for biomonitoring
title_full Biodiversity patterns of Arctic diatom assemblages in lakes and streams: Current reference conditions and historical context for biomonitoring
title_fullStr Biodiversity patterns of Arctic diatom assemblages in lakes and streams: Current reference conditions and historical context for biomonitoring
title_full_unstemmed Biodiversity patterns of Arctic diatom assemblages in lakes and streams: Current reference conditions and historical context for biomonitoring
title_sort biodiversity patterns of arctic diatom assemblages in lakes and streams: current reference conditions and historical context for biomonitoring
publisher Wiley
publishDate 2020
url https://hdl.handle.net/11250/2660718
https://doi.org/10.1111/fwb.13490
geographic Arctic
geographic_facet Arctic
genre Arctic
genre_facet Arctic
op_source 1-25
Freshwater Biology
op_relation Freshwater Biology. 2020, 1-25.
urn:issn:0046-5070
https://hdl.handle.net/11250/2660718
https://doi.org/10.1111/fwb.13490
cristin:1812663
op_rights Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 Internasjonal
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/deed.no
© 2020 The Authors
op_rightsnorm CC-BY-NC-ND
op_doi https://doi.org/10.1111/fwb.13490
container_title Freshwater Biology
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