A1 Alkuperäisartikkeli tieteellisessä aikakauslehdessä
Increasing temperature and productivity change biomass, trophic pyramids and community‐level omega‐3 fatty acid content in subarctic lake food webs (2021)


Keva, O., Taipale, S. J., Hayden, B., Thomas, S. M., Vesterinen, J., Kankaala, P., & Kahilainen, K. K. (2021). Increasing temperature and productivity change biomass, trophic pyramids and community‐level omega‐3 fatty acid content in subarctic lake food webs. Global Change Biology, 27(2), 282-296. https://doi.org/10.1111/gcb.15387


JYU-tekijät tai -toimittajat


Julkaisun tiedot

Julkaisun kaikki tekijät tai toimittajatKeva, Ossi; Taipale, Sami J.; Hayden, Brian; Thomas, Stephen M.; Vesterinen, Jussi; Kankaala, Paula; Kahilainen, Kimmo K.

Lehti tai sarjaGlobal Change Biology

ISSN1354-1013

eISSN1365-2486

Julkaisuvuosi2021

Ilmestymispäivä30.10.2020

Volyymi27

Lehden numero2

Artikkelin sivunumerot282-296

KustantajaWiley-Blackwell

JulkaisumaaBritannia

Julkaisun kielienglanti

DOIhttps://doi.org/10.1111/gcb.15387

Julkaisun avoin saatavuusEi avoin

Julkaisukanavan avoin saatavuus

Julkaisu on rinnakkaistallennettu (JYX)https://jyx.jyu.fi/handle/123456789/72447


Tiivistelmä

Climate change in the Arctic is outpacing the global average and land‐use is intensifying due to exploitation of previously inaccessible or unprofitable natural resources. A comprehensive understanding of how the joint effects of changing climate and productivity modify lake food web structure, biomass, trophic pyramid shape and abundance of physiologically essential biomolecules (omega‐3 fatty acids) in the biotic community is lacking. We conducted a space‐for‐time study in 20 subarctic lakes spanning a climatic (+3.2°C and precipitation: +30%) and chemical (dissolved organic carbon: +10 mg/L, total phosphorus: +45 µg/L and total nitrogen: +1,000 µg/L) gradient to test how temperature and productivity jointly affect the structure, biomass and community fatty acid content (eicosapentaenoic acid [EPA] and docosahexaenoic acid [DHA]) of whole food webs. Increasing temperature and productivity shifted lake communities towards dominance of warmer, murky‐water‐adapted taxa, with a general increase in the biomass of primary producers, and secondary and tertiary consumers, while primary invertebrate consumers did not show equally clear trends. This process altered various trophic pyramid structures towards an hour glass shape in the warmest and most productive lakes. Increasing temperature and productivity had negative fatty acid content trends (mg EPA + DHA/g dry weight) in primary producers and primary consumers, but not in secondary nor tertiary fish consumers. The massive biomass increment of fish led to increasing areal fatty acid content (kg EPA + DHA/ha) towards increasingly warmer, more productive lakes, but there were no significant trends in other trophic levels. Increasing temperature and productivity are shifting subarctic lake communities towards systems characterized by increasing dominance of cyanobacteria and cyprinid fish, although decreasing quality in terms of EPA + DHA content was observed only in phytoplankton, zooplankton and profundal benthos.


YSO-asiasanatvesiekosysteemitravintoverkotravintoaineetomegarasvahapotilmastonmuutoksetmaankäyttömetsänhoitoliuennut orgaaninen hiili

Vapaat asiasanatDOC; food web structure; forestry; land‐use; nutrients; omega‐3 HUFA; trophic level; trophic pyramid


Liittyvät organisaatiot


OKM-raportointiKyllä

Raportointivuosi2021

JUFO-taso3


Viimeisin päivitys 2024-03-04 klo 20:47