The implications of cyanobacteria blooms on the base of the Lake Winnipeg food web
Over the past two decades, Lake Winnipeg has been experiencing increasingly rapid eutrophication, and large cyanobacterial blooms now form in the North Basin in most years in late summer or fall. Cyanobacteria are considered a relatively poor food source compared with other phytoplankton, but the im...
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ndltd-MANITOBA-oai-mspace.lib.umanitoba.ca-1993-220492014-01-31T03:39:05Z The implications of cyanobacteria blooms on the base of the Lake Winnipeg food web Bryan, Matthew George Hann, Brenda (Biological Sciences) Robinson, Gordon (Biological Sciences) Hanson, Mark (Environment and Geography) stable isotopes phytoplankton aquatic ecology harmful algal bloom Over the past two decades, Lake Winnipeg has been experiencing increasingly rapid eutrophication, and large cyanobacterial blooms now form in the North Basin in most years in late summer or fall. Cyanobacteria are considered a relatively poor food source compared with other phytoplankton, but the impacts of these blooms upon the primary consumers in the lake have not previously been researched. A microscopic analysis of whole water samples found cyanobacteria to be scarcely present in summer 2012, with nitrogen-fixing and non-fixing cyanobacteria comprising 11.2% and 8.4% of the basin-wide biovolume, respectively, and all but absent in fall. Gut content analysis of chironomids found that cyanobacteria made up an almost negligible part of their diet. Stable isotope analysis revealed that nitrogen-fixing cyanobacteria reduced phytoplankton δ15N values, and that this same reduction could be traced through the zooplankton, but not down to the sediments or chironomids. 2013-08-21T17:24:40Z 2013-08-21T17:24:40Z 2013-08-21 http://hdl.handle.net/1993/22049 |
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stable isotopes phytoplankton aquatic ecology harmful algal bloom |
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stable isotopes phytoplankton aquatic ecology harmful algal bloom Bryan, Matthew George The implications of cyanobacteria blooms on the base of the Lake Winnipeg food web |
description |
Over the past two decades, Lake Winnipeg has been experiencing increasingly rapid eutrophication, and large cyanobacterial blooms now form in the North Basin in most years in late summer or fall. Cyanobacteria are considered a relatively poor food source compared with other phytoplankton, but the impacts of these blooms upon the primary consumers in the lake have not previously been researched. A microscopic analysis of whole water samples found cyanobacteria to be scarcely present in summer 2012, with nitrogen-fixing and non-fixing cyanobacteria comprising 11.2% and 8.4% of the basin-wide biovolume, respectively, and all but absent in fall. Gut content analysis of chironomids found that cyanobacteria made up an almost negligible part of their diet. Stable isotope analysis revealed that nitrogen-fixing cyanobacteria reduced phytoplankton δ15N values, and that this same reduction could be traced through the zooplankton, but not down to the sediments or chironomids. |
author2 |
Hann, Brenda (Biological Sciences) |
author_facet |
Hann, Brenda (Biological Sciences) Bryan, Matthew George |
author |
Bryan, Matthew George |
author_sort |
Bryan, Matthew George |
title |
The implications of cyanobacteria blooms on the base of the Lake Winnipeg food web |
title_short |
The implications of cyanobacteria blooms on the base of the Lake Winnipeg food web |
title_full |
The implications of cyanobacteria blooms on the base of the Lake Winnipeg food web |
title_fullStr |
The implications of cyanobacteria blooms on the base of the Lake Winnipeg food web |
title_full_unstemmed |
The implications of cyanobacteria blooms on the base of the Lake Winnipeg food web |
title_sort |
implications of cyanobacteria blooms on the base of the lake winnipeg food web |
publishDate |
2013 |
url |
http://hdl.handle.net/1993/22049 |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT bryanmatthewgeorge theimplicationsofcyanobacteriabloomsonthebaseofthelakewinnipegfoodweb AT bryanmatthewgeorge implicationsofcyanobacteriabloomsonthebaseofthelakewinnipegfoodweb |
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