Comparing key drivers of cyanobacteria biomass in temperate and tropical systems

Harmful Algae. 2020 Jul:97:101859. doi: 10.1016/j.hal.2020.101859. Epub 2020 Jun 29.

Abstract

There is growing evidence that cyanobacterial blooms are becoming more common in different parts of the world; within this context, predictive cyanobacteria models have an essential role in lake management. Several models have been successfully used in temperate systems to describe the main drivers of cyanobacterial blooms, but relatively less work has been conducted in the Tropics. We analyzed data from six Brazilian reservoirs and from five Canadian lakes using a combination of regression tree analyses and variation partitioning to evaluate the similarities and differences between regions. Our results, together with a synthesis of the literature from different latitudes, showed that trophic state (i.e. nutrients), climatic variables (e.g., temperature and/or precipitation) and hydrodynamic regimes (i.e. water residence time) are significant drivers of cyanobacteria biomass over several scales. Nutrients came out as the primary predictor in both regions, followed by climate, but when all systems were pooled together, water residence time came out as most important. The consistency in variables identified between regions suggests that these drivers are widely important and cyanobacteria responded quite similarly in different geographical settings and waterbody types (i.e. lakes or reservoirs). However, more work is needed to identify key thresholds across latitudinal gradients. Taken together, these results suggest that multi-region syntheses can help identify drivers that predict broad-scale patterns of cyanobacteria biomass.

Keywords: Climate change; Cyanobacteria blooms; Eutrophication; Global patterns; Hydrology; Predictive models.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Biomass
  • Brazil
  • Canada
  • Cyanobacteria*
  • Eutrophication*