Impacts of climate warming on the long-term dynamics of key fish species in 24 European lakes

被引:0
作者
Erik Jeppesen
Thomas Mehner
Ian J. Winfield
Külli Kangur
Jouko Sarvala
Daniel Gerdeaux
Martti Rask
Hilmar J. Malmquist
Kerstin Holmgren
Pietro Volta
Susana Romo
Reiner Eckmann
Alfred Sandström
Saúl Blanco
Andu Kangur
Henrik Ragnarsson Stabo
Marjo Tarvainen
Anne-Mari Ventelä
Martin Søndergaard
Torben L. Lauridsen
Mariana Meerhoff
机构
[1] Aarhus University,Department of Bioscience
[2] Greenland Institute of Natural Resources,Greenland Climate Research Centre (GCRC)
[3] Sino-Danish Centre for Education and Research,Centre for Ecology & Hydrology
[4] Leibniz-Institute of Freshwater Ecology and Inland Fisheries,Centre for Limnology at IAES
[5] Department of Biology and Ecology of Fishes,Department of Biology
[6] Lancaster Environment Centre,Department of Aquatic Resources, Institute of Freshwater Research
[7] Estonian University of Life Sciences,Department of Ecology, Faculty of Biology, Campus Burjasot
[8] University of Turku,Limnological Institute
[9] INRA,Departamento de Ecología y Evolución, Centro Universitario Regional Este (CURE), Facultad de Ciencias
[10] Stn Hydrobiol Lacustre,undefined
[11] Finnish Game and Fisheries Research Institute,undefined
[12] Evo Fisheries Research Station,undefined
[13] Natural History Museum of Kópavogur,undefined
[14] Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences,undefined
[15] Consiglio Nazionale delle Ricerche,undefined
[16] Institute of Ecosystems Study,undefined
[17] University of Valencia,undefined
[18] University of Konstanz,undefined
[19] Pyhäjärvi Institute,undefined
[20] Universidad de la República,undefined
来源
Hydrobiologia | 2012年 / 694卷
关键词
Climate change; Fish assemblages; Functional traits; Long-term data series; Europe;
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学科分类号
摘要
Fish play a key role in the trophic dynamics of lakes. With climate warming, complex changes in fish assemblage structure may be expected owing to direct effects of temperature and indirect effects operating through eutrophication, water level changes, stratification and salinisation. We reviewed published and new long-term (10–100 years) fish data series from 24 European lakes (area: 0.04–5,648 km2; mean depth: 1–177 m; a north–south gradient from Sweden to Spain). Along with an annual temperature increase of about 0.15–0.3°C per decade profound changes have occurred in either fish assemblage composition, body size and/or age structure during recent decades and a shift towards higher dominance of eurythermal species. These shifts have occurred despite a reduction in nutrient loading in many of the lakes that should have benefited the larger-sized individuals and the fish species typically inhabiting cold-water, low-nutrient lakes. The cold-stenothermic Arctic charr has been particularly affected and its abundance has decreased in the majority of the lakes where its presence was recorded. The harvest of cool-stenothermal brown trout has decreased substantially in two southern lakes. Vendace, whitefish and smelt show a different response depending on lake depth and latitude. Perch has apparently been stimulated in the north, with stronger year classes in warm years, but its abundance has declined in the southern Lake Maggiore, Italy. Where introduced, roach seems to take advantage of the higher temperature after years of low population densities. Eurythermal species such as common bream, pike–perch and/or shad are apparently on the increase in several of the lakes. The response of fish to the warming has been surprisingly strong and fast in recent decades, making them ideal sentinels for detecting and documenting climate-induced modifications of freshwater ecosystems.
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页码:1 / 39
页数:38
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