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Managing land-use effects on Northland dune lakes: lessons from the past
Authors:Tom Stephens  Paul Augustinus  Brett Rip  Patricia Gadd  Atun Zawadski
Institution:1. DairyNZ Ltd., Hamilton, New Zealand;2. School of Environment, University of Auckland, Auckland, New Zealand;3. Institute for Environmental Research, Australian Nuclear Science and Technology Organisation, Sydney, Australia
Abstract:The Northland region of New Zealand includes numerous high-value, macrophyte-dominated dune lakes. Recent water policy reforms offer limited guidance on managing for aquatic macrophytes. In addition, dune lake histories are poorly known as regular monitoring dates to 2005 AD. Here, ca. 4000 years of lake functional behaviour is reconstructed from sedimentary archives in two Northland dune lakes (Humuhumu and Rotokawau). Results demonstrated that macrophyte dominance is sensitive to catchment erosion and hydrological drawdown. Degradation of macrophyte communities occurred in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, earlier at Lake Humuhumu than Lake Rotokawau (post-1880 AD and post-1930 AD, respectively). In both lakes, increased erosional influx reduced macrophyte productivity, before later increases to wider trophic state (post-1970 AD). Lake-level decline is linked to increased nutrient loading at Lake Rotokawau but less so, Lake Humuhumu which is more strongly groundwater-fed. In Northland dune lakes, water-level reduction and erosional influx from land use have driven macrophyte degradation.
Keywords:Macrophytes  paleolimnology  water clarity  hydrology  nutrients  dune lake  New Zealand
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