Publications by authors named "Heather L Moorhouse"

Tropical river deltas, and the social-ecological systems they sustain, are changing rapidly due to anthropogenic activity and climatic change. Baseline data to inform sustainable management options for resilient deltas is urgently needed and palaeolimnology (reconstructing past conditions from lake or wetland deposits) can provide crucial long-term perspectives needed to identify drivers and rates of change. We review how palaeolimnology can be a valuable tool for resource managers using three current issues facing tropical delta regions: hydrology and sediment supply, salinisation and nutrient pollution.

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The heterogeneous nature of lotic habitats plays an important role in the complex ecological and evolutionary processes that structure the microbial communities within them. Due to such complexity, our understanding of lotic microbial ecology still lacks conceptual frameworks for the ecological processes that shape these communities. We explored how bacterial community composition and underlying ecological assembly processes differ between lotic habitats by examining community composition and inferring community assembly processes across four major habitat types (free-living, particle-associated, biofilm on benthic stones and rocks, and sediment).

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Article Synopsis
  • * The study examines changes in primary producer communities in 11 connected lakes in the Lake District, UK, over the past 200 years, using algal pigments as indicators, revealing significant changes in lowland lakes primarily driven by wastewater treatment.
  • * In contrast, upland lakes show weak responses to temperature changes and exhibit asynchronous dynamics in their primary producers, underscoring that regional factors and a lake's landscape position can influence ecosystem responses differently than local nutrient inputs.
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