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The NSERC Canadian Lake Pulse Network: A national assessment of lake health providing science for water management in a changing climate

The distribution and quality of water resources vary dramatically across Canada, and human impacts such as land-use and climate changes are exacerbating uncertainties in water supply and security. At the national level, Canada has no enforceable standards for safe drinking water and no comprehensive...

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Published in:The Science of the total environment 2019-12, Vol.695, p.133668-133668, Article 133668
Main Authors: Huot, Yannick, Brown, Catherine A., Potvin, Geneviève, Antoniades, Dermot, Baulch, Helen M., Beisner, Beatrix E., Bélanger, Simon, Brazeau, Stéphanie, Cabana, Hubert, Cardille, Jeffrey A., del Giorgio, Paul A., Gregory-Eaves, Irene, Fortin, Marie-Josée, Lang, Andrew S., Laurion, Isabelle, Maranger, Roxane, Prairie, Yves T., Rusak, James A., Segura, Pedro A., Siron, Robert, Smol, John P., Vinebrooke, Rolf D., Walsh, David A.
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Language:English
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Summary:The distribution and quality of water resources vary dramatically across Canada, and human impacts such as land-use and climate changes are exacerbating uncertainties in water supply and security. At the national level, Canada has no enforceable standards for safe drinking water and no comprehensive water-monitoring program to provide detailed, timely reporting on the state of water resources. To provide Canada's first national assessment of lake health, the NSERC Canadian Lake Pulse Network was launched in 2016 as an academic-government research partnership. LakePulse uses traditional approaches for limnological monitoring as well as state-of-the-art methods in the fields of genomics, emerging contaminants, greenhouse gases, invasive pathogens, paleolimnology, spatial modelling, statistical analysis, and remote sensing. A coordinated sampling program of about 680 lakes together with historical archives and a geomatics analysis of over 80,000 lake watersheds are used to examine the extent to which lakes are being altered now and in the future, and how this impacts aquatic ecosystem services of societal importance. Herein we review the network context, objectives and methods. [Display omitted] •About 90% of Canada's municipal drinking water supplies are from surface waters.•An academic-government group is providing the first national review of lake health.•Over 100 variables were sampled at about 680 lakes across Canada.•Topics range from greenhouse gases to emerging contaminants to invasive pathogens.•The impacts of land-use and climate changes on lake health are also studied.
ISSN:0048-9697
1879-1026
DOI:10.1016/j.scitotenv.2019.133668