100 years of vegetation decline and recovery in Lake Fure, Denmark.

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Standard

100 years of vegetation decline and recovery in Lake Fure, Denmark. / Jensen, Kaj Sand; Pedersen, Niels Lagergaard; Thorsgaard, Inge; Moeslund, Bjarne; Borum, Jens; Brodersen, Klaus Peter.

I: Journal of Ecology, Bind 96, 2008, s. 260-271.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Jensen, KS, Pedersen, NL, Thorsgaard, I, Moeslund, B, Borum, J & Brodersen, KP 2008, '100 years of vegetation decline and recovery in Lake Fure, Denmark.', Journal of Ecology, bind 96, s. 260-271. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-2745.2007.01339.x

APA

Jensen, K. S., Pedersen, N. L., Thorsgaard, I., Moeslund, B., Borum, J., & Brodersen, K. P. (2008). 100 years of vegetation decline and recovery in Lake Fure, Denmark. Journal of Ecology, 96, 260-271. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-2745.2007.01339.x

Vancouver

Jensen KS, Pedersen NL, Thorsgaard I, Moeslund B, Borum J, Brodersen KP. 100 years of vegetation decline and recovery in Lake Fure, Denmark. Journal of Ecology. 2008;96:260-271. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-2745.2007.01339.x

Author

Jensen, Kaj Sand ; Pedersen, Niels Lagergaard ; Thorsgaard, Inge ; Moeslund, Bjarne ; Borum, Jens ; Brodersen, Klaus Peter. / 100 years of vegetation decline and recovery in Lake Fure, Denmark. I: Journal of Ecology. 2008 ; Bind 96. s. 260-271.

Bibtex

@article{ccc18cc0e45211dcbee902004c4f4f50,
title = "100 years of vegetation decline and recovery in Lake Fure, Denmark.",
abstract = "We analysed the development of submerged macrophytes in Lake Fure, Denmark, experiencing a 30-fold increase of phosphorus input from year 1900 to 1970 and a subsequent decline to twice the 1900 level in 2005. Nutrient enrichment stimulated phytoplankton growth and restricted macrophyte distribution by reducing water transparency from a summer mean of 5-6 m in the early 1900s to a minimum of 1.6 m at the peak of eutrophication, followed by recovery to a recent maximum of 4.1 m. • Macrophyte occurrence and abundance changed in accordance with altered environmental conditions and species' life-history traits. Small angiosperms, mosses and characeans disappeared in the 1970s to 1980s, along with all vegetation in deeper waters (5-8 m), and have only partly recovered recently. Tall angiosperms became dominant while small species vanished. All 10 characeans originally present disappeared at the peak of eutrophication, but four reappeared. Mesotrophic macroalgae were replaced by hypertrophic species whose dominance has persisted. Species richness decreased from 37 to 13 species at the peak of eutrophication, before returning to 25 species during the recent recovery. Species richness increased with transparency because deeper growth generates more niches.Reduction of species distribution and richness has been reversible following nutrient reduction of the long eutrophied lake, whereas species composition and abundance have not. The historical legacy of community composition is strong, as reflected by closer correlations to time than to measures of nitrogen and phosphorus availability and water transparency. Synthesis. Although phosphorus input may decline further, reassembly of the original macrophyte community will face difficulties. Oligotrophic freshwater species have become rare throughout Denmark, reducing the probability of recolonization. Species reaching Lake Fure may fail to establish because sediments have become richer in nutrients and organic matter and less consolidated, while shading and competition have increased from emergent reeds, tall submerged angiosperms and fast-growing macroalgae. ",
author = "Jensen, {Kaj Sand} and Pedersen, {Niels Lagergaard} and Inge Thorsgaard and Bjarne Moeslund and Jens Borum and Brodersen, {Klaus Peter}",
note = "Keywords: characeans; eutrophication; freshwater macrophytes; historical changes; historical legacy; Lake Fure; lake; nutrient reduction; plants; recovery",
year = "2008",
doi = "10.1111/j.1365-2745.2007.01339.x",
language = "English",
volume = "96",
pages = "260--271",
journal = "Journal of Ecology",
issn = "0022-0477",
publisher = "Wiley-Blackwell",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - 100 years of vegetation decline and recovery in Lake Fure, Denmark.

AU - Jensen, Kaj Sand

AU - Pedersen, Niels Lagergaard

AU - Thorsgaard, Inge

AU - Moeslund, Bjarne

AU - Borum, Jens

AU - Brodersen, Klaus Peter

N1 - Keywords: characeans; eutrophication; freshwater macrophytes; historical changes; historical legacy; Lake Fure; lake; nutrient reduction; plants; recovery

PY - 2008

Y1 - 2008

N2 - We analysed the development of submerged macrophytes in Lake Fure, Denmark, experiencing a 30-fold increase of phosphorus input from year 1900 to 1970 and a subsequent decline to twice the 1900 level in 2005. Nutrient enrichment stimulated phytoplankton growth and restricted macrophyte distribution by reducing water transparency from a summer mean of 5-6 m in the early 1900s to a minimum of 1.6 m at the peak of eutrophication, followed by recovery to a recent maximum of 4.1 m. • Macrophyte occurrence and abundance changed in accordance with altered environmental conditions and species' life-history traits. Small angiosperms, mosses and characeans disappeared in the 1970s to 1980s, along with all vegetation in deeper waters (5-8 m), and have only partly recovered recently. Tall angiosperms became dominant while small species vanished. All 10 characeans originally present disappeared at the peak of eutrophication, but four reappeared. Mesotrophic macroalgae were replaced by hypertrophic species whose dominance has persisted. Species richness decreased from 37 to 13 species at the peak of eutrophication, before returning to 25 species during the recent recovery. Species richness increased with transparency because deeper growth generates more niches.Reduction of species distribution and richness has been reversible following nutrient reduction of the long eutrophied lake, whereas species composition and abundance have not. The historical legacy of community composition is strong, as reflected by closer correlations to time than to measures of nitrogen and phosphorus availability and water transparency. Synthesis. Although phosphorus input may decline further, reassembly of the original macrophyte community will face difficulties. Oligotrophic freshwater species have become rare throughout Denmark, reducing the probability of recolonization. Species reaching Lake Fure may fail to establish because sediments have become richer in nutrients and organic matter and less consolidated, while shading and competition have increased from emergent reeds, tall submerged angiosperms and fast-growing macroalgae.

AB - We analysed the development of submerged macrophytes in Lake Fure, Denmark, experiencing a 30-fold increase of phosphorus input from year 1900 to 1970 and a subsequent decline to twice the 1900 level in 2005. Nutrient enrichment stimulated phytoplankton growth and restricted macrophyte distribution by reducing water transparency from a summer mean of 5-6 m in the early 1900s to a minimum of 1.6 m at the peak of eutrophication, followed by recovery to a recent maximum of 4.1 m. • Macrophyte occurrence and abundance changed in accordance with altered environmental conditions and species' life-history traits. Small angiosperms, mosses and characeans disappeared in the 1970s to 1980s, along with all vegetation in deeper waters (5-8 m), and have only partly recovered recently. Tall angiosperms became dominant while small species vanished. All 10 characeans originally present disappeared at the peak of eutrophication, but four reappeared. Mesotrophic macroalgae were replaced by hypertrophic species whose dominance has persisted. Species richness decreased from 37 to 13 species at the peak of eutrophication, before returning to 25 species during the recent recovery. Species richness increased with transparency because deeper growth generates more niches.Reduction of species distribution and richness has been reversible following nutrient reduction of the long eutrophied lake, whereas species composition and abundance have not. The historical legacy of community composition is strong, as reflected by closer correlations to time than to measures of nitrogen and phosphorus availability and water transparency. Synthesis. Although phosphorus input may decline further, reassembly of the original macrophyte community will face difficulties. Oligotrophic freshwater species have become rare throughout Denmark, reducing the probability of recolonization. Species reaching Lake Fure may fail to establish because sediments have become richer in nutrients and organic matter and less consolidated, while shading and competition have increased from emergent reeds, tall submerged angiosperms and fast-growing macroalgae.

U2 - 10.1111/j.1365-2745.2007.01339.x

DO - 10.1111/j.1365-2745.2007.01339.x

M3 - Journal article

VL - 96

SP - 260

EP - 271

JO - Journal of Ecology

JF - Journal of Ecology

SN - 0022-0477

ER -

ID: 2905076