There have been sporadic reports of aquatic, benthic Microcoleus proliferations in freshwater rivers, lakes, and reservoirs for four decades, with reports increasing in frequency over the last twenty years, suggesting a possible rise in their global distribution, frequency, and intensity. Microcoleus can produce anatoxins which are neurotoxic, and ingestion of toxic mats has caused hundreds of dog fatalities and raised serious human and ecological health concerns. This review synthesizes and evaluates current knowledge on Microcoleus distribution, taxonomy, toxin production, toxicity, ecology, environmental drivers, and biotic interactions. Toxin-producing Microcoleus have been reported in at least 18 countries, though many regions have not conducted toxin testing, suggesting a broader but under-reported distribution. Proliferations occur across diverse habitats, including cobble-bedded streams, large sandy rivers, reservoirs, and lakes. Microcoleus proliferations also occur on macrophytes, both in lakes and rivers. Genomic analyses currently classify anatoxin-producing Microcoleus into distinct species, with all known anatoxin-producers isolated from freshwater ecosystems. Anatoxin concentrations vary widely over space and time, within and among waterbodies. While studies on environmental drivers remain limited, research in cobble-bedded rivers suggests that moderate enrichment of dissolved inorganic nitrogen and low dissolved reactive phosphorus concentrations in the water column promote proliferation. Metagenomic approaches have revealed unique nutrient acquisition and storage strategies used by Microcoleus. Key knowledge gaps remain around the environmental and ecological triggers of proliferation, toxin production, genomic diversity and microbial interactions. Addressing these gaps through coordinated, global studies using robust datasets and consistent methods is critical to improve prediction, monitoring, and mitigation of this increasingly widespread public and ecological health threat.
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Emerging threats and persistent conservation challenges for freshwater biodiversity
In the 12 years since Dudgeonet al.(2006) reviewed major pressures on freshwater ecosystems, the biodiversity crisis inthe world’s lakes, reservoirs, rivers, streams and wetlands has deepened. While lakes, reservoirs and rivers cover only2.3% of the Earth’s surface, these ecosystems host at least 9.5% of the Earth’s described animal species. Furthermore,using the World Wide Fund for Nature’s Living Planet Index, freshwater population declines (83% between 1970 and2014) continue to outpace contemporaneous declines in marine or terrestrial systems. The Anthropocene has broughtmultiple new and varied threats that disproportionately impact freshwater systems. We document 12 emerging threatsto freshwater biodiversity that are either entirely new since 2006 or have since intensified: (i) changing climates; (ii)e-commerce and invasions; (iii) infectious diseases; (iv) harmful algal blooms; (v) expanding hydropower; (vi) emergingcontaminants; (vii) engineered nanomaterials; (viii) microplastic pollution; (ix) light and noise; (x) freshwater salinisation;(xi) declining calcium; and (xii) cumulative stressors. Effects are evidenced for amphibians, fishes, invertebrates, microbes,plants, turtles and waterbirds, with potential for ecosystem-level changes through bottom-up and top-down processes.In our highly uncertain future, the net effects of these threats raise serious concerns for freshwater ecosystems. However,we also highlight opportunities for conservation gains as a result of novel management tools (e.g. environmental flows,environmental DNA) and specific conservation-oriented actions (e.g. dam removal, habitat protection policies, managedrelocation of species) that have been met with varying levels of success. Moving forward, we advocate hybrid approachesthat manage fresh waters as crucial ecosystems for human life support as well as essential hotspots of biodiversity andecological function. Efforts to reverse global trends in freshwater degradation now depend on bridging an immense gapbetween the aspirations of conservation biologists and the accelerating rate of species endangerment.
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- Award ID(s):
- 1637686
- PAR ID:
- 10080331
- Date Published:
- Journal Name:
- Biological Reviews
- ISSN:
- 1464-7931
- Format(s):
- Medium: X
- Sponsoring Org:
- National Science Foundation
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