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Assessing and addressing the re-eutrophication of Lake Erie: Central basin hypoxia

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Title Assessing and addressing the re-eutrophication of Lake Erie: Central basin hypoxia
Names Scavia, Donald (creator)
Allan, J. David (creator)
Arend, Kristin K. (creator)
Brandt, Stephen B. (creator)
et al. (creator)
Date Issued 2014-06 (iso8601)
Note To the best of our knowledge, one or more authors of this paper were federal employees when contributing to this work. This is the publisher’s final pdf. The article is copyrighted by the International Association for Great Lakes Research and published by Elsevier. It can be found at: http://www.journals.elsevier.com/journal-of-great-lakes-research/.
Abstract Relieving phosphorus loading is a key management tool for controlling Lake Erie eutrophication. During the
1960s and 1970s, increased phosphorus inputs degraded water quality and reduced central basin hypolimnetic
oxygen levels which, in turn, eliminated thermal habitat vital to cold-water organisms and contributed to the
extirpation of important benthic macroinvertebrate prey species for fishes. In response to load reductions initiated
in 1972, Lake Erie responded quickly with reduced water-column phosphorus concentrations, phytoplankton
biomass, and bottom-water hypoxia (dissolved oxygen < 2 mg/l). Since the mid-1990s, cyanobacteria blooms increased
and extensive hypoxia and benthic algae returned. We synthesize recent research leading to guidance for
addressing this re-eutrophication, with particular emphasis on central basin hypoxia. We document recent
trends in key eutrophication-related properties, assess their likely ecological impacts, and develop load
response curves to guide revised hypoxia-based loading targets called for in the 2012 Great Lakes Water Quality
Agreement. Reducing central basin hypoxic area to levels observed in the early 1990s (ca. 2000 km²) requires
cutting total phosphorus loads by 46% from the 2003–2011 average or reducing dissolved reactive phosphorus
loads by 78% from the 2005–2011 average. Reductions to these levels are also protective of fish habitat. We provide
potential approaches for achieving those new loading targets, and suggest that recent load reduction recommendations
focused on western basin cyanobacteria blooms may not be sufficient to reduce central basin
hypoxia to 2000 km².
Genre Article
Topic Lake Erie
Identifier Scavia, D., David Allan, J., Arend, K. K., Bartell, S., Beletsky, D., Bosch, N. S., ... & Zhou, Y. (2014). Assessing and addressing the re-eutrophication of Lake Erie: Central basin hypoxia. Journal of Great Lakes Research, 40(2), 226-246. doi:10.1016/j.jglr.2014.02.004

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