Award: OCE-1230735

Award Title: RAPID response to an extreme low ice year on Lake Erie
Funding Source: NSF Division of Ocean Sciences (NSF OCE)
Program Manager: David L. Garrison

Outcomes Report

Normal 0 false false false EN-US X-NONE X-NONE MicrosoftInternetExplorer4 Lakes and reservoirs serve as rapid responding sentinels of human influence on the natural environment rendering them powerful tools to advance our understanding of a changing climate on ecosystem structure and function. The Laurentian Great Lakes are especially valuable in this respect in that they share characteristics of both oceans and closed basin systems such that knowledge gained from their study can be used to gain insights for our coastal oceans. The effects of climate change have been especially pronounced in the Great Lakes where winter ice cover has declined by 71% over the past 4 decades. The decline is not constant; rather it is driven by high interannual variability combined with an increase in the frequency of years with low ice cover. The manifestations of declining ice cover have likely far-reaching effects on biogeochemical cycles and ecosystem functioning in lakes. Further, the ecological integrity of aquatic systems is intimately tied to the activities of microbial populations and consortia. Whereas we possess a baseline knowledge of microbial diversity in the Great Lakes, we know little about how these communities respond to the manifestations of climate change. This RAPID project to understand the effect of low ice extent on phytoplankton community structure and function in Lake Erie addressed manifestations of climate change as factors predicted to drive shifts in the phytoplankton community. The project exploited a nearly ice-free winter season on Lake Erie driven by a warm positive Arctic Oscillation in winter 2012 (Fig. 1a). Surveys conducted during high-ice years in 2010 and 2011 as well as follow-on activities in winter 2013 provided a comparison with 'normal' ice years (Fig. 1b). With this project, we showed that dramatic changes in annual ice cover were accompanied by equally dramatic shifts in phytoplankton community structure (Fig. 2). Expansive ice cover documented for Lake Erie in winters 2010 and 2011 supported ice-associated phytoplankton blooms dominated by physiologically robust, filamentous centric diatoms. By comparison, coincident with nearly ice-free conditions in winter 2012 were pronounced declines in microplankton (> 20 μm) chlorophyll a biomass. The phytoplankton community in winter 2013 was dominated by microplankton- sized filamentous diatoms, coincident with expansive ice cover and thus returning to the size structure of the 2010 and 2011 communities. Reduced size is recognized as a universal ecological response to global warming in aquatic systems although it usually marks a response to climate warming over multiple years, not a single season as shown here. Additional insights into microbial community dynamics were gleaned from short 16S rRNA tag Illumina sequencing which demonstrated that diatoms are the dominant taxa (phytoplankton + microbes) during winter in the lake regardless of surface ice cover (Fig. 3). Thus, whereas cell size of the phototrophic community was biased towards cells smaller than 20 µm, diatoms still persisted. Further, UniFrac analysis of iTag sequences showed clear separation of microbial communities related to presence or absence of ice cover. These changes are expected to have important consequences for Lake Erie's food web. Last Modified: 04/05/2014 Submitted by: Robert M Mckay

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People

Principal Investigator: Robert M. McKay (Bowling Green State University)

Co-Principal Investigator: Paul Morris

Co-Principal Investigator: George S Bullerjahn