Search results for "eutrophication"

showing 10 items of 188 documents

Phytoplankton communities of polar regions–Diversity depending on environmental conditions and chemical anthropopressure

2015

The polar regions (Arctic and Antarctic) constitute up to 14% of the biosphere and offer some of the coldest and most arid Earth's environments. Nevertheless several oxygenic phototrophs including some higher plants, mosses, lichens, various algal groups and cyanobacteria, survive that harsh climate and create the base of the trophic relationships in fragile ecosystems of polar environments. Ecosystems in polar regions are characterized by low primary productivity and slow growth rates, therefore they are more vulnerable to disturbance, than those in temperate regions. From this reason, chemical contaminants influencing the growth of photoautotrophic producers might induce serious disorders…

Environmental Engineering010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciencesLichensAntarctic RegionsFresh WaterBryophyta010501 environmental sciencesManagement Monitoring Policy and LawCyanobacteria01 natural sciencesPhytoplanktonTemperate climateArctic environment; Cyanobacteria; Persistent organic pollutants (POPs); Phytoplankton communitiesEcosystemLichenWaste Management and DisposalEcosystem0105 earth and related environmental sciencesTrophic levelPhototrophPrimary producersEcologyArctic RegionsfungiGeneral MedicineEutrophicationCold ClimateArcticPhytoplanktonEnvironmental scienceWater Pollutants ChemicalEnvironmental MonitoringJournal of Environmental Management
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Plankton participation in the performance of three constructed wetlands within a Mediterranean natural park.

2019

Abstract The contribution of plankton in the performance of three constructed wetlands (CWs) within the Albufera de Valencia Natural Park has been analyzed, taxonomic group by group, over a two-year operation period in the different sectors of each CW: horizontal subsurface-flow –A–, free-water surface flow –B– and lagoons –C–. Tancat de la Pipa CW (TPCW) only contains B–C sectors, while the others have all three types. Treatment efficiency of each sector type on the taxonomic groups was evaluated by calculating frequency of phytoplankton reduction (or zooplankton production), mass removal (or production) efficiencies and rates, and accumulated removed phytoplankton mass (or produced zoopla…

Environmental Engineering010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciencesWetland010501 environmental sciencesCyanobacteria01 natural sciencesZooplanktonZooplanktonPhycocyaninPhytoplanktonEnvironmental ChemistryAnimalsWaste Management and Disposal0105 earth and related environmental sciencesHydrologygeographyBiomass (ecology)geography.geographical_feature_categoryPlanktonPlanktonPollutionWetlandsPhytoplanktonEnvironmental scienceWater qualityEutrophicationThe Science of the total environment
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Effect of multiple agricultural stressors on freshwater ecosystems: The role of community structure, trophic status, and biodiversity-functioning rel…

2022

Abstract The toxicity and widespread use of agricultural pesticides threaten freshwater biodiversity, but their long-term effects under different nutrient concentrations are poorly understood. We evaluated the single or combined effects of two pesticides (chlorpyrifos and diuron) under different nutrient regimes (mesotrophic and eutrophic) on community structure and ecosystem functions in replicated pond mesocosms. The individual application of nutrients and pesticides affected community composition and species richness. Ecosystem functioning was generally less sensitive to chemical stress than community structure, while eutrophication fostered the dominance of species that are more resilie…

Environmental EngineeringEcologyCommunity structureBiodiversityFresh WaterQ Science (General)BiodiversityBiologyPollutionFreshwater ecosystemEnvironmental ChemistryEcosystemSpecies richnessEcosystem respirationEutrophicationWaste Management and DisposalEcosystemTrophic level
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Combined effects of eutrophication and warming on polyunsaturated fatty acids in complex phytoplankton communities:A mesocosm experiment

2022

Climate change and eutrophication are among the main stressors of shallow freshwater ecosystems, and their effects on phytoplankton community structure and primary production have been studied extensively. However, their combined effects on the algal production of polyunsaturated fatty acids (PUFA), specifically, eicosapentaenoic acid (EPA) and docosahexaenoic acid (DHA) are currently unresolved. Moreover, the proximate reasons for changes in phytoplankton EPA and DHA concentrations are unclear, i.e., the relative importance of ecological (changes in the community composition) vs. ecophysiological (within taxa changes in EPA and DHA levels) factors. We investigated the responses of phytopla…

Environmental EngineeringEicosapentaenoic acidDocosahexaenoic AcidsrehevöityminenplanktonMesocosmilmastonmuutoksetEutrophicationCyanobacteriaPollutionLakesDocosahexaenoic acidEicosapentaenoic AcidPhytoplanktonFatty Acids UnsaturatedEnvironmental ChemistrylämpeneminenWaste Management and DisposalEcosystem
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Assessing the potential of Albufera de València Lagoon sediments for the restoration of charophyte meadows

2013

Abstract Albufera de Valencia Lagoon, the largest littoral lagoon on the Iberian Peninsula, has been affected by eutrophication processes since the 1970s due to the direct dumping of sewage waters of industrial, agricultural and urban origin. Consequently, the submerged vegetation that covered the bottom of the lagoon has been lost (charophytes and Potamogeton spp., Myriophyllum spp. and Ceratophyllum spp.). Despite efforts to improve water quality, this vegetation has not recovered. No information about the potential of the recent sediments to host charophyte development is available. In this study, we analysed several sediment cores taken from different areas of the lagoon to determine th…

Environmental EngineeringbiologyMyriophyllumEcologySedimentManagement Monitoring Policy and Lawbiology.organism_classificationCeratophyllumChara vulgarisLittoral zoneEnvironmental scienceWater qualityPotamogetonEutrophicationNature and Landscape ConservationEcological Engineering
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Recent environmental history of a large, originally oligotrophic lake in Finland: a palaeolimnological study of chironomid remains

1993

The sedimentary chironomid stratigraphy in short-core samples covering approx. the past 150 years was studied in the northernmost basin of Lake Paijanne, southern Finland (62° 11′ N, 25° 48′ E). The basin has received effluent loading from the wood-processing industry and municipal waste water. Four developmental stages were distinguished based on the changes in chironomid assemblages: 1. Pre-industrial stage (dated by the210Pb method as covering approximately the period 1838–1936), 2. Stage of increasing pollution (approx. 1944–1973), 3. The ‘black decade’, or the period of worst pollution (approx. 1973–1983), and 4. Water protection stage (approx. 1983 onwards). During the first stage the…

Environmental changeBenthic zoneEcologySedimentProfundal zoneTrophic state indexPhysical geographyAquatic ScienceStructural basinEutrophicationEffluentEarth-Surface ProcessesJournal of Paleolimnology
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Use of stable isotope analysis to evaluate the possible impact of fish migration on a lake biomanipulation

2007

1. A lake restoration project involving mass fish removals was started to improve further the water quality of a lake recovering from severe eutrophication. The effectiveness of such biomanipulation as a lake management option could be compromised if removed fish are rapidly replaced by large-scale immigration from a connected lake. 2. Stable isotope analysis (SIA) was used to examine the migrations of perch (Perca fluviatilis L.) and roach (Rutilus rutilus (L.)) between two connected lakes in central Finland, Jyvasjarvi and the larger Paijanne. Baseline δ15N signatures in primary consumers were significantly higher in Jyvasjarvi and this difference was reflected further up the food chain i…

Fish migrationPerchBiomanipulationEcologybiologyFishingδ15NAquatic Sciencebiology.organism_classificationFisheryRutilusEutrophicationNature and Landscape ConservationIsotope analysisAquatic Conservation: Marine and Freshwater Ecosystems
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Biomanipulating the drinking water reservoir of Estonia's capital city: Prospects for success

2008

The possibility of utilizing biomanipulation to improve the water quality of Tallinn's drinking water reservoir (Lake Ulemiste) was analysed on the basis of water quality data, test fishing by different methods, and earlier studies on aquatic plants, light climate and sediments. Eutrophic, polymictic Lake Ulemiste is characterized by a prevalence of high filamentous cyanobacteria biomass, rotifers in the zooplankton community, mature bream in the fish biomass, and a high density of planktivores (YOY perch). Several prerequisites for being a potential target for biomanipulation were identified, including (i) decreased external total phosphorus (TP) loading; and (ii) a sufficient stock of pis…

FisheryBiomanipulationEcologyAquatic plantPhytoplanktonEnvironmental scienceWater qualityEutrophicationPlanktivoreZooplanktonWater Science and TechnologyMacrophyteLakes & Reservoirs: Science, Policy and Management for Sustainable Use
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Can lake restoration by fish removal improve the status of profundal macroinvertebrate assemblages?

2013

Summary Removal of fish to restore lake pelagic food webs and water quality has been shown to increase the abundance of benthic invertebrates in shallow areas due to decreased predation pressure, while responses of profundal macroinvertebrate assemblages are less well documented. We used multivariate analyses and a Before-After-Control-Impact design to assess the impacts of fish removal (in total 101 000 kg of percid and cyprinid fish) on profundal macroinvertebrate species composition and abundance and ecological status in two basins of a eutrophic boreal lake. In the deeper main basin, macroinvertebrate community composition and classification of ecological status were not affected by fis…

FisheryBiomanipulationEcologyBenthic zoneAbundance (ecology)Community structureEnvironmental sciencePelagic zoneProfundal zoneAquatic ScienceEutrophicationTrophic levelFreshwater Biology
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Risk assessment of gypsum amendment on agricultural fields: Effects of sulfate on riverine biota

2022

Gypsum (CaSO4 ∙ 2H2 O) amendment is a promising way of decreasing the phosphorus loading of arable lands, and of thus preventing aquatic eutrophication. However, in freshwaters with low sulfate concentrations, gypsum-released sulfate may pose a threat to the biota. To assess such risks, we performed a series of sulfate toxicity tests in the laboratory and conducted field surveys. These field surveys were associated with a large-scale pilot exercise involving spreading gypsum on agricultural fields covering 18% of the Savijoki River catchment area. The gypsum amendment in such fields resulted in about fourfold increase in the mean sulfate concentration for a 2-month period, and a transient, …

Fontinalis antipyreticaHealth Toxicology and Mutagenesisved/biology.organism_classification_rank.speciesSavijokisulfatevesistönkuormituschemistry.chemical_compoundmaanparannusaineetfosforiFinlandSulfatesBiotaeliöyhteisötBiotatoksisuusympäristövaikutuksetEnvironmental chemistryympäristöriskitkipsiGypsumBaltic SeaAmendmentchemistry.chemical_elementtestitengineering.materialmyrkyllisyysCalcium SulfateRisk AssessmenttapaustutkimusRiversSuomiEnvironmental ChemistryAnimalsSulfatepellotved/biologyPhosphoruskuormitusfungiGypsumvesistövaikutuksetgypsumBivalviachemistrysulfaatitItämeriengineeringEnvironmental scienceWater qualityEutrophicationWater Pollutants Chemical
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