Resting cysts of freshwater dinoflagellates in southeastern Georgian Bay (Lake Huron) as proxies of cultural eutrophication

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Resting cysts of freshwater dinoflagellates in southeastern Georgian Bay (Lake Huron) as proxies of cultural eutrophication. / McCarthy, Francine M.G.; Mertens, Kenneth Neil; Ellegaard, Marianne; Sherman, Keith; Pospelova, Vera; dos Santos Ribeiro, Sofia Isabel; Blasco, Stephan; Vercauteren, Dries.

In: Review of Palaeobotany and Palynology, Vol. 166, No. 1–2, 2011, p. 46-62.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

McCarthy, FMG, Mertens, KN, Ellegaard, M, Sherman, K, Pospelova, V, dos Santos Ribeiro, SI, Blasco, S & Vercauteren, D 2011, 'Resting cysts of freshwater dinoflagellates in southeastern Georgian Bay (Lake Huron) as proxies of cultural eutrophication', Review of Palaeobotany and Palynology, vol. 166, no. 1–2, pp. 46-62. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.revpalbo.2011.04.008

APA

McCarthy, F. M. G., Mertens, K. N., Ellegaard, M., Sherman, K., Pospelova, V., dos Santos Ribeiro, S. I., Blasco, S., & Vercauteren, D. (2011). Resting cysts of freshwater dinoflagellates in southeastern Georgian Bay (Lake Huron) as proxies of cultural eutrophication. Review of Palaeobotany and Palynology, 166(1–2), 46-62. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.revpalbo.2011.04.008

Vancouver

McCarthy FMG, Mertens KN, Ellegaard M, Sherman K, Pospelova V, dos Santos Ribeiro SI et al. Resting cysts of freshwater dinoflagellates in southeastern Georgian Bay (Lake Huron) as proxies of cultural eutrophication. Review of Palaeobotany and Palynology. 2011;166(1–2):46-62. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.revpalbo.2011.04.008

Author

McCarthy, Francine M.G. ; Mertens, Kenneth Neil ; Ellegaard, Marianne ; Sherman, Keith ; Pospelova, Vera ; dos Santos Ribeiro, Sofia Isabel ; Blasco, Stephan ; Vercauteren, Dries. / Resting cysts of freshwater dinoflagellates in southeastern Georgian Bay (Lake Huron) as proxies of cultural eutrophication. In: Review of Palaeobotany and Palynology. 2011 ; Vol. 166, No. 1–2. pp. 46-62.

Bibtex

@article{1488e4cb400d4f2796b164c89749b892,
title = "Resting cysts of freshwater dinoflagellates in southeastern Georgian Bay (Lake Huron) as proxies of cultural eutrophication",
abstract = "Resting cysts attributed to the freshwater dinoflagellate genus Peridinium were found in surface sediments from Severn Sound, southeastern Georgian Bay (Lake Huron, Laurentian Great Lakes of North America). Two distinct cyst morphotypes were present and they were assigned to Peridinium wisconsinense Eddy, 1930 and Peridinium willei Huitfeldt-Kaas, 1900 by establishing cyst–theca relationships through germinations and single-cell LSU rDNA analysis on an excysted cell of Peridinium willei. Sediments recovered from deep, sheltered portions of Severn Sound and restricted basins like Honey Harbour contained between ~ 750 and 8500 cysts/cm3. However, winnowing by bottom currents and high concentrations of dissolved oxygen adversely impact the dinoflagellate cyst record on the lakebed, and cyst concentrations in easily remobilized muds on bathymetric highs were < 100 cysts/cm3. Down-core changes in the relative abundances of these two cyst morphotypes were attributed primarily to cultural eutrophication related to land-use changes around Severn Sound over the last six centuries. Cysts of Peridinium willei, a cosmopolitan dinoflagellate species that occurs in a broad range of temperature, pH and nutrient conditions, comprise 60–74% of the cysts identified in Ambrosia (ragweed)-rich sediments in the upper 20 cm of a gravity core taken from Honey Harbour. Euro-Canadian settlement and land-clearing that began in the Midland-Penetanguishene region around A.D. 1840 are evident in the increase in Ambrosia (ragweed), Gramineae (grasses) and other herbs (non-arboreal pollen) that mark the base of the Ambrosia zone (pollen zone 4) as well as an overall increase in terrigenous flux. In addition to siltation, this terrigenous flux increased the availability of limiting nutrients to the previously oligotrophic waters of Severn Sound, leading to increased cyst flux in Honey Harbour peaking at nearly 3000 cysts/cm2/y in A.D. 1966, an order of magnitude higher than cyst fluxes prior to the Euro-Canadian Ambrosia zone. Peridinium wisconsinense was the more common dinoflagellate cyst species in Honey Harbour prior to Euro-Canadian settlement, when cyst flux was an order of magnitude lower. This is consistent with the restriction of this species to relatively warm, oligotrophic to mesotrophic lakes in North America. An earlier increase in P. willei at the expense of P. wisconsinense in the core from Honey Harbour within pollen zone 3 d (~ 700 to ~ 150 yBP) is attributed to earlier land-clearing by the Wendat (“Huron”), who practiced agriculture in the Penetanguishene peninsula between ~ A.D. 1450–1650. The cysts of these freshwater dinoflagellates thus appear to be sensitive to cultural eutrophication.",
author = "McCarthy, {Francine M.G.} and Mertens, {Kenneth Neil} and Marianne Ellegaard and Keith Sherman and Vera Pospelova and {dos Santos Ribeiro}, {Sofia Isabel} and Stephan Blasco and Dries Vercauteren",
year = "2011",
doi = "10.1016/j.revpalbo.2011.04.008",
language = "English",
volume = "166",
pages = "46--62",
journal = "Review of Palaeobotany and Palynology",
issn = "0034-6667",
publisher = "Elsevier",
number = "1–2",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Resting cysts of freshwater dinoflagellates in southeastern Georgian Bay (Lake Huron) as proxies of cultural eutrophication

AU - McCarthy, Francine M.G.

AU - Mertens, Kenneth Neil

AU - Ellegaard, Marianne

AU - Sherman, Keith

AU - Pospelova, Vera

AU - dos Santos Ribeiro, Sofia Isabel

AU - Blasco, Stephan

AU - Vercauteren, Dries

PY - 2011

Y1 - 2011

N2 - Resting cysts attributed to the freshwater dinoflagellate genus Peridinium were found in surface sediments from Severn Sound, southeastern Georgian Bay (Lake Huron, Laurentian Great Lakes of North America). Two distinct cyst morphotypes were present and they were assigned to Peridinium wisconsinense Eddy, 1930 and Peridinium willei Huitfeldt-Kaas, 1900 by establishing cyst–theca relationships through germinations and single-cell LSU rDNA analysis on an excysted cell of Peridinium willei. Sediments recovered from deep, sheltered portions of Severn Sound and restricted basins like Honey Harbour contained between ~ 750 and 8500 cysts/cm3. However, winnowing by bottom currents and high concentrations of dissolved oxygen adversely impact the dinoflagellate cyst record on the lakebed, and cyst concentrations in easily remobilized muds on bathymetric highs were < 100 cysts/cm3. Down-core changes in the relative abundances of these two cyst morphotypes were attributed primarily to cultural eutrophication related to land-use changes around Severn Sound over the last six centuries. Cysts of Peridinium willei, a cosmopolitan dinoflagellate species that occurs in a broad range of temperature, pH and nutrient conditions, comprise 60–74% of the cysts identified in Ambrosia (ragweed)-rich sediments in the upper 20 cm of a gravity core taken from Honey Harbour. Euro-Canadian settlement and land-clearing that began in the Midland-Penetanguishene region around A.D. 1840 are evident in the increase in Ambrosia (ragweed), Gramineae (grasses) and other herbs (non-arboreal pollen) that mark the base of the Ambrosia zone (pollen zone 4) as well as an overall increase in terrigenous flux. In addition to siltation, this terrigenous flux increased the availability of limiting nutrients to the previously oligotrophic waters of Severn Sound, leading to increased cyst flux in Honey Harbour peaking at nearly 3000 cysts/cm2/y in A.D. 1966, an order of magnitude higher than cyst fluxes prior to the Euro-Canadian Ambrosia zone. Peridinium wisconsinense was the more common dinoflagellate cyst species in Honey Harbour prior to Euro-Canadian settlement, when cyst flux was an order of magnitude lower. This is consistent with the restriction of this species to relatively warm, oligotrophic to mesotrophic lakes in North America. An earlier increase in P. willei at the expense of P. wisconsinense in the core from Honey Harbour within pollen zone 3 d (~ 700 to ~ 150 yBP) is attributed to earlier land-clearing by the Wendat (“Huron”), who practiced agriculture in the Penetanguishene peninsula between ~ A.D. 1450–1650. The cysts of these freshwater dinoflagellates thus appear to be sensitive to cultural eutrophication.

AB - Resting cysts attributed to the freshwater dinoflagellate genus Peridinium were found in surface sediments from Severn Sound, southeastern Georgian Bay (Lake Huron, Laurentian Great Lakes of North America). Two distinct cyst morphotypes were present and they were assigned to Peridinium wisconsinense Eddy, 1930 and Peridinium willei Huitfeldt-Kaas, 1900 by establishing cyst–theca relationships through germinations and single-cell LSU rDNA analysis on an excysted cell of Peridinium willei. Sediments recovered from deep, sheltered portions of Severn Sound and restricted basins like Honey Harbour contained between ~ 750 and 8500 cysts/cm3. However, winnowing by bottom currents and high concentrations of dissolved oxygen adversely impact the dinoflagellate cyst record on the lakebed, and cyst concentrations in easily remobilized muds on bathymetric highs were < 100 cysts/cm3. Down-core changes in the relative abundances of these two cyst morphotypes were attributed primarily to cultural eutrophication related to land-use changes around Severn Sound over the last six centuries. Cysts of Peridinium willei, a cosmopolitan dinoflagellate species that occurs in a broad range of temperature, pH and nutrient conditions, comprise 60–74% of the cysts identified in Ambrosia (ragweed)-rich sediments in the upper 20 cm of a gravity core taken from Honey Harbour. Euro-Canadian settlement and land-clearing that began in the Midland-Penetanguishene region around A.D. 1840 are evident in the increase in Ambrosia (ragweed), Gramineae (grasses) and other herbs (non-arboreal pollen) that mark the base of the Ambrosia zone (pollen zone 4) as well as an overall increase in terrigenous flux. In addition to siltation, this terrigenous flux increased the availability of limiting nutrients to the previously oligotrophic waters of Severn Sound, leading to increased cyst flux in Honey Harbour peaking at nearly 3000 cysts/cm2/y in A.D. 1966, an order of magnitude higher than cyst fluxes prior to the Euro-Canadian Ambrosia zone. Peridinium wisconsinense was the more common dinoflagellate cyst species in Honey Harbour prior to Euro-Canadian settlement, when cyst flux was an order of magnitude lower. This is consistent with the restriction of this species to relatively warm, oligotrophic to mesotrophic lakes in North America. An earlier increase in P. willei at the expense of P. wisconsinense in the core from Honey Harbour within pollen zone 3 d (~ 700 to ~ 150 yBP) is attributed to earlier land-clearing by the Wendat (“Huron”), who practiced agriculture in the Penetanguishene peninsula between ~ A.D. 1450–1650. The cysts of these freshwater dinoflagellates thus appear to be sensitive to cultural eutrophication.

U2 - 10.1016/j.revpalbo.2011.04.008

DO - 10.1016/j.revpalbo.2011.04.008

M3 - Journal article

VL - 166

SP - 46

EP - 62

JO - Review of Palaeobotany and Palynology

JF - Review of Palaeobotany and Palynology

SN - 0034-6667

IS - 1–2

ER -

ID: 49101570