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RESEARCH PRODUCT

Long-Term Consequences of Water Pumping on the Ecosystem Functioning of Lake Sekšu, Latvia

Tomi P. LuotoAnna LankaTom JilbertMartins RobeznieksInta Dimante-deimantovicaIzabela ZawiskaNormunds StivrinsNormunds StivrinsWojciech TylmannMonika RzodkiewiczSaija Saarni

subject

INDICATORS0106 biological scienceslcsh:Hydraulic engineeringwater level fluctuationGeography Planning and DevelopmentDIAGENESISNorthern EuropeLEVEL FLUCTUATIONS01 natural sciencesBiochemistrylcsh:Water supply for domestic and industrial purposes:Geofag: 450 [VDP]CULTURAL EUTROPHICATION:Geosciences: 450 [VDP]Water Science and Technologybiologymulti-proxy approachPlanktonCladoceraSTATE6. Clean waterORGANIC-MATTEReutrophicationOceanographyCladocera1181 Ecology evolutionary biologyHypolimnionSEDIMENTS010506 paleontologyINDEXESAquatic ScienceChironomidaeHYPOLIMNETIC OXYGENdiatomslcsh:TC1-978Ecosystem14. Life underwater1172 Environmental sciences0105 earth and related environmental scienceslcsh:TD201-500010604 marine biology & hydrobiologyfungiSediment15. Life on landbiology.organism_classificationWater levelDiatom13. Climate actionEnvironmental scienceEutrophicationSOUTHERN FINLAND

description

Cultural eutrophication, the process by which pollution due to human activity speeds up natural eutrophication, is a widespread and consequential issue. Here, we present the 85-year history of a small, initially Lobelia&ndash

https://doi.org/10.3390/w12051459