1996
DOI: 10.4319/lo.1996.41.5.1004
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The effects of climatic warming on the properties of boreal lakes and streams at the Experimental Lakes Area, northwestern Ontario

Abstract: A period of prolonged warmer, drier-than-normal weather in northwestern Ontario during the 1970s and 1980s resulted in severe forest fires that caused dramatic changes to lake and stream catchments. The changed interactions of weather with catchments and hydrological processes caused unexpected changes in physical, chemical, and biological processes in lakes and streams. Permanent first-order streams became ephemeral. Flows at spring melt were lower, and chemical exports from catchments were reduced. Although … Show more

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Cited by 457 publications
(424 citation statements)
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“…Within the boreal zone, warming affects organic matter load from primary production and import from the watershed widely different among regions, depending on different trajectories of precipitation. For example, while watershed OC export has decreased in parts of the Canadian boreal zone 50,51 , it has increased in some, but not all parts of Scandinavia 52,53 potentially resulting in concomitant changes in C delivery to the sediments 54. The robust relationship between temperature and OC mineralization ( Fig.…”
Section: Supplementary Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Within the boreal zone, warming affects organic matter load from primary production and import from the watershed widely different among regions, depending on different trajectories of precipitation. For example, while watershed OC export has decreased in parts of the Canadian boreal zone 50,51 , it has increased in some, but not all parts of Scandinavia 52,53 potentially resulting in concomitant changes in C delivery to the sediments 54. The robust relationship between temperature and OC mineralization ( Fig.…”
Section: Supplementary Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Finally, community variability was also maximal since 1980 in Buffalo Pound Lake, a site without direct sewage inputs. Instead, we suggest that recent increases in algal production (Dixit et al 2000) and invertebrate community variation reflect regional climate change, as recorded east (Schindler et al 1996) and west (Vinebrooke et al 1998) of the Qu'Appelle drainage.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…There is now mounting evidence that shifts in climate and other environmental factors are driving increasing aquatic concentrations of terrestrially derived DOC in many landscapes of the world [7][8][9] , in what has been termed the 'browning' 10 of inland waters. Whereas the magnitude and regulation of the browning phenomenon are the focus of intense research and debate 7,[11][12][13][14][15][16][17] , the potential implications of such a shift in terrestrial carbon (C) concentrations for the functioning of the receiving aquatic systems have been less explored, particularly in terms of the impacts on aquatic CO 2 emissions.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%