Modeling the sensitivity of cyanobacteria blooms to plausible changes in precipitation and air temperature variability


TitleModeling the sensitivity of cyanobacteria blooms to plausible changes in precipitation and air temperature variability
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2021
AuthorsHecht, JS, Zia, A, Clemins, PJ, Schroth, AW, Winter, JM, Oikonomou, PD, Rizzo, DM
JournalScience of The Total Environment
Volume812
Start Page151586
Pagination151586
Date Published2022/03
ISSN00489697
KeywordsClimate change, cyanobacteria, Integrated modeling, Lake Champlain, Sensitivity analysis, Variability
Abstract

Many recent studies have attributed the observed variability of cyanobacteria blooms to meteorological drivers and have projected blooms with worsening societal and ecological impacts under future climate scenarios. Nonetheless, few studies have jointly examined their sensitivity to projected changes in both precipitation and temperature variability. Using an Integrated Assessment Model (IAM) of Lake Champlain's eutrophic Missisquoi Bay, we demonstrate a factorial design approach for evaluating the sensitivity of concentrations of chlorophyll a (chl-a), a cyanobacteria surrogate, to global climate model-informed changes in the central tendency and variability of daily precipitation and air temperature.

An Analysis of Variance (ANOVA) and multivariate contour plots highlight synergistic effects of these climatic changes on exceedances of the World Health Organization's moderate 50 μg/L concentration threshold for recreational contact. Although increased precipitation produces greater riverine total phosphorus loads, warmer and drier scenarios produce the most severe blooms due to the greater mobilization and cyanobacteria uptake of legacy phosphorus under these conditions. Increases in daily precipitation variability aggravate blooms most under warmer and wetter scenarios. Greater temperature variability raises exceedances under current air temperatures but reduces them under more severe warming when water temperatures exceed optimal values for cyanobacteria growth more often. Our experiments, controlled for wind-induced changes to lake water quality, signal the importance of larger summer runoff events for curtailing bloom growth through reductions of water temperature, sunlight penetration and stratification. Finally, the importance of sequences of wet and dry periods in generating cyanobacteria blooms motivates future research on bloom responses to changes in interannual climate persistence.

URLhttps://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S004896972106664X
DOI10.1016/j.scitotenv.2021.151586
Short TitleScience of The Total Environment
Refereed DesignationRefereed
Status: 
Published
Attributable Grant: 
BREE
Grant Year: 
Year6
Acknowledged VT EPSCoR: 
Ack-Yes