4.7 Article

A catastrophic change in a european protected wetland: From harmful phytoplankton blooms to fish and bird kill

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL POLLUTION
Volume 312, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.envpol.2022.120038

Keywords

Ramsar; Mass mortality event; Sediment seed; egg bank species; Ecological interactions; Ecological degradation; Ecosystem functioning

Funding

  1. European Union [MIS-5000432]

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The investigation in a European protected wetland revealed that changes in phytoplankton and zooplankton dynamics, particularly the collapse of harmful blooms, led to a mass kill of fauna. High nutrient concentrations and inhibitory ammonia levels played a key role in triggering the collapse of harmful blooms, ultimately causing a shift in the ecosystem dynamics.
Understanding the processes that underlay an ecological disaster represents a major scientific challenge. Here, we investigated phytoplankton and zooplankton community changes before and during a fauna mass kill in a European protected wetland. Evidence on gradual development and collapse of harmful phytoplankton blooms, allowed us to delineate the biotic and abiotic interactions that led to this ecological disaster. Before the mass fauna kill, mixed blooms of known harmful cyanobacteria and the killer alga Prymnesium parvum altered biomass flow and minimized zooplankton resource use efficiency. These blooms collapsed under high nutrient concen-trations and inhibitory ammonia levels, with low phytoplankton biomass leading to a dramatic drop in photo-synthetic oxygenation and a shift to a heterotrophic ecosystem phase. Along with the phytoplankton collapse, extremely high numbers of red planktonic crustaceans -Daphnia magna , visible through satellite images, indicated low oxygen conditions as well as a decrease or absence of fish predation pressure. Our findings provide clear evidence that the mass episode of fish and birds kill resulted through severe changes in phytoplankton and zooplankton dynamics, and the alternation on key abiotic conditions. Our study highlights that plankton-related ecosystem functions mirror the accumulated heavy anthropogenic impacts on freshwaters and could reflect a failure in conservation and restoration measures.

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