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Hydroclimate Variability Affects Habitat‐Specific (Open Water and Littoral) Lake Metabolism
Author(s) -
Scordo Facundo,
Lottig Noah R.,
Fiorenza Juan E.,
Culpepper Joshua,
Simmons James,
Seitz Carina,
Krynak Edward M.,
Suenaga Erin,
Chandra Sudeep
Publication year - 2022
Publication title -
water resources research
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.863
H-Index - 217
eISSN - 1944-7973
pISSN - 0043-1397
DOI - 10.1029/2021wr031094
Subject(s) - littoral zone , environmental science , habitat , biomass (ecology) , ecosystem , climate change , lake ecosystem , productivity , ecology , hydrology (agriculture) , context (archaeology) , primary production , atmospheric sciences , geography , geology , biology , geotechnical engineering , archaeology , economics , macroeconomics
Lakes integrate the signals of changing hydroclimate in their surrounding basin, which substantially influence gross primary production (GPP), respiration (R), and net ecosystem production (NEP). Most research focuses only on the changes to the open water habitat despite the littoral habitat's importance to lakes and its sensitivity to hydroclimatic variability. We analyze how years with different ice‐out dates and snow water equivalent (SWE) triggered different metabolism responses in the open water and littoral habitats of a subalpine lake. The dry (early ice‐out date and low SWE) and wet (late ice‐out date and high SWE) years had lower GPP and R rates in both habitats compared to the average hydroclimatic year. Furthermore, consumer biomass decreased during dry and wet years. GPP and R reduced the most in the littoral habitat. Consequently, the relative contribution to total lake GPP and R of the littoral habitat decreased, and the contribution of the open water habitat increased during the dry and wet years. We demonstrate that hydroclimatic conditions affect productivity and consumer biomass and show that within‐lake habitats do not experience equivalent responses to climate forcing. Our study has implications for how ecosystem scientists and managers quantify the absolute and relative contributions of the littoral habitat to whole lake production in the context of climate variation.

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