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Invasion by mats of free-floating plants is among the most important threats to the functioning and biodiversity of freshwater ecosystems ranging from temperate ponds and ditches to tropical lakes. Dark, anoxic conditions under thick floating-plant cover leave little opportunity for animal or plant life, and they can have large negative impacts on fisheries and navigation in tropical lakes. Here, we demonstrate that floating-plant dominance can be a self-stabilizing ecosystem state, which may explain its notorious persistence in many situations. Our results, based on experiments, field data, and models, represent evidence for alternative domains of attraction in ecosystems. An implication of our findings is that nutrient enrichment reduces the resilience of freshwater systems against a shift to floating-plant dominance. On the other hand, our results also suggest that a single drastic harvest of floating plants can induce a permanent shift to an alternative state dominated by rooted, submerged growth forms.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1073/pnas.0737918100 | DOI Listing |
J Plankton Res
August 2025
Wageningen Universiy & Research, Aquaculture and Fisheries Group, De Elst 1, Wageningen 6708 WD, the Netherlands.
Until the 1950s, large-bodied calanoids and cladocerans dominated the zooplankton community of Lake Victoria, whereas cyclopoid copepods only comprised 10% of microcrustaceans. From the 1960's onwards, cyclopoid copepods increased to 70-90% of zooplankton and cladocerans, now dominated by small species, decreased to ca. 5%.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEnviron Res
August 2025
Geosciences Division, Physical Research Laboratory, Ahmedabad, India. Electronic address:
Lakes are hotspots for carbon and nitrogen cycling and a major contributor to the natural fluxes of greenhouse gases [GHGs: methane (CH), carbon dioxide (CO), and nitrous oxide (NO)] to the atmosphere. Lake volume reduction and salinization are major threats to lakes across the globe, and their effect on lake biogeochemistry warrants detailed investigation. Given the majority of the studies addressing this crisis are from the higher latitudes, the response of tropical lakes, and shallow lakes in particular, to changing magnitude of environmental stressors is a major research gap.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFLancet Reg Health West Pac
July 2025
Tropical Diseases Research Group, Murdoch Children's Research Institute, Melbourne, Australia.
Background: Scabies is a treatable neglected tropical disease with a high burden in Pacific island countries. Scabies is strongly associated with bacterial skin infection, which can lead to long-term sequelae. There is a paucity of epidemiologic data from Kiribati relating to scabies and bacterial skin infection.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEnviron Monit Assess
August 2025
Grupo de Investigación en Biodiversidad, Medio Ambiente y Salud (BIOMAS), Universidad de Las Américas, Quito, Ecuador.
The recent rapid expansion of mineral and petrochemical extraction throughout Amazonia has intensified concerns about the extent and origins of heavy-metal contamination in one of the world's most biodiverse freshwater ecosystems. While most recent studies have emphasized anthropogenic sources (direct releases, produced waters, spills, roads, and other sources to the environment from human activities), the role of natural geochemical processes remains comparatively understudied. Here, we assess seasonal and spatial variation in heavy metal concentrations in water and sediments of the Napo and Pastaza drainage basins in eastern Ecuador, with an assessment of potential environmental and health risks.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSci Rep
August 2025
Leibniz Institute of Freshwater Ecology and Inland Fisheries (IGB), Müggelseedamm 310, 12587, Berlin, Germany.
Niche-based models are essential for predicting invasion risks. Although most invasive species tend to conserve their ecological niches after introduction, some challenge this assumption by expanding or contracting their niches, yet such patterns remain underexplored in microorganisms. Since larger niche shifts can reduce the predictive performance of these models, this study examines whether the climatic niches of the invasive dinoflagellates Ceratium hirundinella (Müller, 1841) and C.
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