Scientists’ Warning to Humanity: Rapid degradation of the world’s large lakes
Jean‐Philippe Jenny, Orlane Anneville, Fabien Arnaud, Yoann Baulaz, Damien Bouffard, Isabelle Domaizon, Serghei A. Bocaniov, Nathalie Chèvre, Maria Dittrich, Jean-Marcel Dorioz, Erin S. Dunlop, Gaël Dur, Jean Guillard, Thibault Guinaldo, Stéphan Jacquet, Aurélien Jamoneau, Zobia Jawed, Erik Jeppesen, Gail Krantzberg, John D. Lenters, Barbara Leoni, Michel Meybeck, Veronica Nava, Tiina Nõges, Peeter Nõges, M Patelli, Victoria Pebbles, Marie‐Elodie Perga, Séréna Rasconi, Carl R. Ruetz, Lars G. Rudstam, Nico Salmaso, Sapna Sharma, Dietmar Straile, Olga Tammeorg, Michael R. Twiss, Donald G Uzarski, Anne-Mari Ventelä, Warwick F. Vincent, Steven W. Wilhelm, Sten-Åke Wängberg, Gesa A. Weyhenmeyer
Abstract
Abstract Large lakes of the world are habitats for diverse species, including endemic taxa, and are valuable resources that provide humanity with many ecosystem services. They are also sentinels of global and local change, and recent studies in limnology and paleolimnology have demonstrated disturbing evidence of their collective degradation in terms of depletion of resources (water and food), rapid warming and loss of ice, destruction of habitats and ecosystems, loss of species, and accelerating pollution. Large lakes are particularly exposed to anthropogenic and climatic stressors. The Second Warning to Humanity provides a framework to assess the dangers now threatening the world’s large lake ecosystems and to evaluate pathways of sustainable development that are more respectful of their ongoing provision of services. Here we review current and emerging threats to the large lakes of the world, including iconic examples of lake management failures and successes, from which we identify priorities and approaches for future conservation efforts. The review underscores the extent of lake resource degradation, which is a result of cumulative perturbation through time by long-term human impacts combined with other emerging stressors. Decades of degradation of large lakes have resulted in major challenges for restoration and management and a legacy of ecological and economic costs for future generations. Large lakes will require more intense conservation efforts in a warmer, increasingly populated world to achieve sustainable, high-quality waters. This Warning to Humanity is also an opportunity to highlight the value of a long-term lake observatory network to monitor and report on environmental changes in large lake ecosystems.- Cite:
- Jean‐Philippe Jenny, Orlane Anneville, Fabien Arnaud, Yoann Baulaz, Damien Bouffard, Isabelle Domaizon, Serghei A. Bocaniov, Nathalie Chèvre, Maria Dittrich, Jean-Marcel Dorioz, Erin S. Dunlop, Gaël Dur, Jean Guillard, Thibault Guinaldo, Stéphan Jacquet, Aurélien Jamoneau, Zobia Jawed, Erik Jeppesen, Gail Krantzberg, et al.. 2020. Scientists’ Warning to Humanity: Rapid degradation of the world’s large lakes. Journal of Great Lakes Research, Volume 46, Issue 4, 46(4):686–702.
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@article{Jenny-2020-Scientists’,
title = "Scientists{'} Warning to Humanity: Rapid degradation of the world{'}s large lakes",
author = {Jenny, Jean‐Philippe and
Anneville, Orlane and
Arnaud, Fabien and
Baulaz, Yoann and
Bouffard, Damien and
Domaizon, Isabelle and
Bocaniov, Serghei A. and
Ch{\`e}vre, Nathalie and
Dittrich, Maria and
Dorioz, Jean-Marcel and
Dunlop, Erin S. and
Dur, Ga{\"e}l and
Guillard, Jean and
Guinaldo, Thibault and
Jacquet, St{\'e}phan and
Jamoneau, Aur{\'e}lien and
Jawed, Zobia and
Jeppesen, Erik and
Krantzberg, Gail and
Lenters, John D. and
Leoni, Barbara and
Meybeck, Michel and
Nava, Veronica and
N{\~o}ges, Tiina and
N{\~o}ges, Peeter and
Patelli, M and
Pebbles, Victoria and
Perga, Marie‐Elodie and
Rasconi, S{\'e}r{\'e}na and
Ruetz, Carl R. and
Rudstam, Lars G. and
Salmaso, Nico and
Sharma, Sapna and
Straile, Dietmar and
Tammeorg, Olga and
Twiss, Michael R. and
Uzarski, Donald G and
Ventel{\"a}, Anne-Mari and
Vincent, Warwick F. and
Wilhelm, Steven W. and
W{\"a}ngberg, Sten-{\AA}ke and
Weyhenmeyer, Gesa A.},
journal = "Journal of Great Lakes Research, Volume 46, Issue 4",
volume = "46",
number = "4",
year = "2020",
publisher = "Elsevier BV",
url = "https://gwf-uwaterloo.github.io/gwf-publications/G20-91001",
doi = "10.1016/j.jglr.2020.05.006",
pages = "686--702",
abstract = "Abstract Large lakes of the world are habitats for diverse species, including endemic taxa, and are valuable resources that provide humanity with many ecosystem services. They are also sentinels of global and local change, and recent studies in limnology and paleolimnology have demonstrated disturbing evidence of their collective degradation in terms of depletion of resources (water and food), rapid warming and loss of ice, destruction of habitats and ecosystems, loss of species, and accelerating pollution. Large lakes are particularly exposed to anthropogenic and climatic stressors. The Second Warning to Humanity provides a framework to assess the dangers now threatening the world{'}s large lake ecosystems and to evaluate pathways of sustainable development that are more respectful of their ongoing provision of services. Here we review current and emerging threats to the large lakes of the world, including iconic examples of lake management failures and successes, from which we identify priorities and approaches for future conservation efforts. The review underscores the extent of lake resource degradation, which is a result of cumulative perturbation through time by long-term human impacts combined with other emerging stressors. Decades of degradation of large lakes have resulted in major challenges for restoration and management and a legacy of ecological and economic costs for future generations. Large lakes will require more intense conservation efforts in a warmer, increasingly populated world to achieve sustainable, high-quality waters. This Warning to Humanity is also an opportunity to highlight the value of a long-term lake observatory network to monitor and report on environmental changes in large lake ecosystems.",
}
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<abstract>Abstract Large lakes of the world are habitats for diverse species, including endemic taxa, and are valuable resources that provide humanity with many ecosystem services. They are also sentinels of global and local change, and recent studies in limnology and paleolimnology have demonstrated disturbing evidence of their collective degradation in terms of depletion of resources (water and food), rapid warming and loss of ice, destruction of habitats and ecosystems, loss of species, and accelerating pollution. Large lakes are particularly exposed to anthropogenic and climatic stressors. The Second Warning to Humanity provides a framework to assess the dangers now threatening the world’s large lake ecosystems and to evaluate pathways of sustainable development that are more respectful of their ongoing provision of services. Here we review current and emerging threats to the large lakes of the world, including iconic examples of lake management failures and successes, from which we identify priorities and approaches for future conservation efforts. The review underscores the extent of lake resource degradation, which is a result of cumulative perturbation through time by long-term human impacts combined with other emerging stressors. Decades of degradation of large lakes have resulted in major challenges for restoration and management and a legacy of ecological and economic costs for future generations. Large lakes will require more intense conservation efforts in a warmer, increasingly populated world to achieve sustainable, high-quality waters. This Warning to Humanity is also an opportunity to highlight the value of a long-term lake observatory network to monitor and report on environmental changes in large lake ecosystems.</abstract>
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%0 Journal Article %T Scientists’ Warning to Humanity: Rapid degradation of the world’s large lakes %A Jenny, Jean‐Philippe %A Anneville, Orlane %A Arnaud, Fabien %A Baulaz, Yoann %A Bouffard, Damien %A Domaizon, Isabelle %A Bocaniov, Serghei A. %A Chèvre, Nathalie %A Dittrich, Maria %A Dorioz, Jean-Marcel %A Dunlop, Erin S. %A Dur, Gaël %A Guillard, Jean %A Guinaldo, Thibault %A Jacquet, Stéphan %A Jamoneau, Aurélien %A Jawed, Zobia %A Jeppesen, Erik %A Krantzberg, Gail %A Lenters, John D. %A Leoni, Barbara %A Meybeck, Michel %A Nava, Veronica %A Nõges, Tiina %A Nõges, Peeter %A Patelli, M. %A Pebbles, Victoria %A Perga, Marie‐Elodie %A Rasconi, Séréna %A Ruetz, Carl R. %A Rudstam, Lars G. %A Salmaso, Nico %A Sharma, Sapna %A Straile, Dietmar %A Tammeorg, Olga %A Twiss, Michael R. %A Uzarski, Donald G. %A Ventelä, Anne-Mari %A Vincent, Warwick F. %A Wilhelm, Steven W. %A Wängberg, Sten-Åke %A Weyhenmeyer, Gesa A. %J Journal of Great Lakes Research, Volume 46, Issue 4 %D 2020 %V 46 %N 4 %I Elsevier BV %F Jenny-2020-Scientists’ %X Abstract Large lakes of the world are habitats for diverse species, including endemic taxa, and are valuable resources that provide humanity with many ecosystem services. They are also sentinels of global and local change, and recent studies in limnology and paleolimnology have demonstrated disturbing evidence of their collective degradation in terms of depletion of resources (water and food), rapid warming and loss of ice, destruction of habitats and ecosystems, loss of species, and accelerating pollution. Large lakes are particularly exposed to anthropogenic and climatic stressors. The Second Warning to Humanity provides a framework to assess the dangers now threatening the world’s large lake ecosystems and to evaluate pathways of sustainable development that are more respectful of their ongoing provision of services. Here we review current and emerging threats to the large lakes of the world, including iconic examples of lake management failures and successes, from which we identify priorities and approaches for future conservation efforts. The review underscores the extent of lake resource degradation, which is a result of cumulative perturbation through time by long-term human impacts combined with other emerging stressors. Decades of degradation of large lakes have resulted in major challenges for restoration and management and a legacy of ecological and economic costs for future generations. Large lakes will require more intense conservation efforts in a warmer, increasingly populated world to achieve sustainable, high-quality waters. This Warning to Humanity is also an opportunity to highlight the value of a long-term lake observatory network to monitor and report on environmental changes in large lake ecosystems. %R 10.1016/j.jglr.2020.05.006 %U https://gwf-uwaterloo.github.io/gwf-publications/G20-91001 %U https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jglr.2020.05.006 %P 686-702
Markdown (Informal)
[Scientists’ Warning to Humanity: Rapid degradation of the world’s large lakes](https://gwf-uwaterloo.github.io/gwf-publications/G20-91001) (Jenny et al., GWF 2020)
- Scientists’ Warning to Humanity: Rapid degradation of the world’s large lakes (Jenny et al., GWF 2020)
ACL
- Jean‐Philippe Jenny, Orlane Anneville, Fabien Arnaud, Yoann Baulaz, Damien Bouffard, Isabelle Domaizon, Serghei A. Bocaniov, Nathalie Chèvre, Maria Dittrich, Jean-Marcel Dorioz, Erin S. Dunlop, Gaël Dur, Jean Guillard, Thibault Guinaldo, Stéphan Jacquet, Aurélien Jamoneau, Zobia Jawed, Erik Jeppesen, Gail Krantzberg, et al.. 2020. Scientists’ Warning to Humanity: Rapid degradation of the world’s large lakes. Journal of Great Lakes Research, Volume 46, Issue 4, 46(4):686–702.