Publications by authors named "Y Vadeboncoeur"

1. This review summarises knowledge on the ecology, toxin production, and impacts of toxic freshwater benthic cyanobacterial proliferations. It documents monitoring, management, and sampling strategies, and explores mitigation options.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Nearshore (littoral) habitats of clear lakes with high water quality are increasingly experiencing unexplained proliferations of filamentous algae that grow on submerged surfaces. These filamentous algal blooms (FABs) are sometimes associated with nutrient pollution in groundwater, but complex changes in climate, nutrient transport, lake hydrodynamics, and food web structure may also facilitate this emerging threat to clear lakes. A coordinated effort among members of the public, managers, and scientists is needed to document the occurrence of FABs, to standardize methods for measuring their severity, to adapt existing data collection networks to include nearshore habitats, and to mitigate and reverse this profound structural change in lake ecosystems.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • Recent studies indicate that PAM fluorometry may overestimate photosynthetic parameters in intact biofilms due to depth-integration effects, where deeper layers are activated by light penetration.
  • A new slide-based thin-film technique was developed to measure fluorescence on a vertically representative subsample, resulting in significantly lower relative errors compared to conventional methods.
  • Empirical results showed improved precision with the slide-based technique, especially for homogeneous biofilms, while emphasizing the need for careful subsampling to avoid issues in heterogeneous biofilms.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Lake Tanganyika (LT) is the largest tropical freshwater lake, and the largest body of anoxic freshwater on Earth's surface. LT's mixed oxygenated surface waters float atop a permanently anoxic layer and host rich animal biodiversity. However, little is known about microorganisms inhabiting LT's 1470 meter deep water column and their contributions to nutrient cycling, which affect ecosystem-level function and productivity.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Food quality determines the growth rate of primary consumers and ecosystem trophic efficiencies, but it is not clear whether variation in primary consumer densities control, or is controlled by, variation in food quality. We quantified variation in the density and condition of an abundant algae-eating cichlid, Tropheus brichardi, with respect to the quality and productivity of algal biofilms within and across rocky coastal sites in Lake Tanganyika, East Africa. Adjacent land use and sediment deposition in the littoral zone varied widely among sites.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF