烟雾
海岸带
环境科学
生物量(生态学)
生态学
底栖区
生产力
光合有效辐射
生态系统
初级生产者
栖息地
海洋学
营养物
生物
光合作用
地理
浮游植物
植物
气象学
地质学
经济
宏观经济学
作者
Facundo Scordo,Sudeep Chandra,Erin Suenaga,Suzanne J. Kelson,Joshua Culpepper,Lucía Scaff,Flavia Tromboni,Timothy J. Caldwell,Carina Seitz,Juan Esteban Fiorenza,Craig E. Williamson,Steven Sadro,Kevin C. Rose,Simon R. Poulson
标识
DOI:10.1038/s41598-021-89926-6
摘要
Abstract Wildfire smoke often covers areas larger than the burned area, yet the impacts of smoke on nearby aquatic ecosystems are understudied. In the summer of 2018, wildfire smoke covered Castle Lake (California, USA) for 55 days. We quantified the influence of smoke on the lake by comparing the physics, chemistry, productivity, and animal ecology in the prior four years (2014–2017) to the smoke year (2018). Smoke reduced incident ultraviolet-B (UV-B) radiation by 31% and photosynthetically active radiation (PAR) by 11%. Similarly, underwater UV-B and PAR decreased by 65 and 44%, respectively, and lake heat content decreased by 7%. While the nutrient limitation of primary production did not change, shallow production in the offshore habitat increased by 109%, likely due to a release from photoinhibition. In contrast, deep-water, primary production decreased and the deep-water peak in chlorophyll a did not develop, likely due to reduced PAR. Despite the structural changes in primary production, light, and temperature, we observed little significant change in zooplankton biomass, community composition, or migration pattern. Trout were absent from the littoral-benthic habitat during the smoke period. The duration and intensity of smoke influences light regimes, heat content, and productivity, with differing responses to consumers.
科研通智能强力驱动
Strongly Powered by AbleSci AI