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      Climate change impacts on zooplankton and benthic communities in Lake Unterer Giglachsee (Niedere Tauern Alps, Austria) : Climate change impacts on aquatic communities

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      International Review of Hydrobiology
      Wiley-Blackwell

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          Lakes as sentinels of climate change.

          While there is a general sense that lakes can act as sentinels of climate change, their efficacy has not been thoroughly analyzed. We identified the key response variables within a lake that act as indicators of the effects of climate change on both the lake and the catchment. These variables reflect a wide range of physical, chemical, and biological responses to climate. However, the efficacy of the different indicators is affected by regional response to climate change, characteristics of the catchment, and lake mixing regimes. Thus, particular indicators or combinations of indicators are more effective for different lake types and geographic regions. The extraction of climate signals can be further complicated by the influence of other environmental changes, such as eutrophication or acidification, and the equivalent reverse phenomena, in addition to other land-use influences. In many cases, however, confounding factors can be addressed through analytical tools such as detrending or filtering. Lakes are effective sentinels for climate change because they are sensitive to climate, respond rapidly to change, and integrate information about changes in the catchment.
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            HISTALP—historical instrumental climatological surface time series of the Greater Alpine Region

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              Climate-driven regime shifts in the biological communities of arctic lakes.

              Fifty-five paleolimnological records from lakes in the circumpolar Arctic reveal widespread species changes and ecological reorganizations in algae and invertebrate communities since approximately anno Domini 1850. The remoteness of these sites, coupled with the ecological characteristics of taxa involved, indicate that changes are primarily driven by climate warming through lengthening of the summer growing season and related limnological changes. The widespread distribution and similar character of these changes indicate that the opportunity to study arctic ecosystems unaffected by human influences may have disappeared.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                International Review of Hydrobiology
                Internat. Rev. Hydrobiol.
                Wiley-Blackwell
                14342944
                May 2013
                May 02 2013
                : 98
                : 2
                : 80-88
                Article
                10.1002/iroh.201301461
                81e5bf11-dd40-4595-8c75-16c3818f3e81
                © 2013

                http://doi.wiley.com/10.1002/tdm_license_1.1

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