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Assessing Potential for Recovery of Biotic Richness and Indicator Species due to Changes in Acidic Deposition and Lake ph in Five Areas of Southeastern Canada
Authors:Susan E Doka  Donald K Mcnicol  Mark L Mallory  Isaac Wong  Charles K Minns  Norman D Yan
Institution:(1) Great Lakes Laboratory for Fisheries & Aquatic Sciences, Fisheries and Oceans Canada, 867 Lakeshore Rd., Box 5050, Burlington, ON, Canada, L7R 4A6;(2) Canadian Wildlife Service, Ontario Region, Environment Canada, 49 Camelot Drive, Nepean, ON, Canada, K1A 0H3;(3) Canadian Wildlife Service, Environment Canada, P.O. Box 1714, Iqaluit, Nunavut, X0A 0H0, Canada;(4) National Water Research Institute, Environment Canada, 867 Lakeshore Rd., Box 5050, Burlington, ON, Canada, L7R 4A6;(5) Department of Biology, York University, 4700 Keele St., Toronto, ON, Canada, M3J 1P3
Abstract:Biological damage to sensitive aquatic ecosystems is among the most recognisable, deleterious effects of acidic deposition. We compiled a large spatial database of over 2000 waterbodies across southeastern Canada from various federal, provincial and academic sources. Data for zooplankton, fish, macroinvertebrate (benthos) and loon species richness and occurrence were used to construct statistical models for lakes with varying pH, dissolved organic carbon content and lake size. pH changes, as described and predicted using the Integrated Assessment Model (Lam et al., 1998; Jeffries et al., 2000), were based on the range of emission reductions set forth in the Canada/US Air Quality Agreement (AQA). The scenarios tested include 1983, 1990, 1994 and 2010 sulphate deposition levels. Biotic models were developed for five regions in southeastern Canada (Algoma, Muskoka, and Sudbury, Ontario, southcentral Québec, and Kejimkujik, Nova Scotia) using regression tree, multiple linear regression and logistic regression analyses to make predictions about recovery after emission reductions. The analyses produced different indicator species in different regions, although some species showed consistent trends across regions. Generally, the greatest predicted recovery occurred during the final phase of emission reductions between 1994 and 2010 across all taxonomic groups and regions. The Ontario regions, on average, were predicted to recover to a greater extent than either southcentral Québec or the Kejimkujik area of Nova Scotia. Our results reconfirm that pH 5.5–6.0 is an important threshold below which damage to aquatic biota will remain a major local and regional environmental problem. This damage to biodiversity across trophic levels will persist well into the future if no further reductions in sulphate deposition are implemented.
Keywords:acidification  benthic invertebrates  fish  lakes  logistic models  loons  Nova Scotia  Ontario  Qué  bec  regression models  zooplankton
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