Contemporary phytoplankton and palaeolimnological studies were
made of the algal response to acidification and liming in three lakes in
Hälsingland, central Sweden (Njupfatet, Sjösjön, Djuptjärn).
Surveys and experimental studies of the phytoplankton response to liming
were undertaken at Njupfatet, together with an experiment designed to determine
the possible role of lake sediments as an inoculum for
any new species arriving in the water column. Liming had little quantitative
or
qualitative effect on the phytoplankton diversity at
Njupfatet, but did result in the loss of the dominant contributor to algal
biomass, Merismopedia tenuissima. None of the four new species
recorded in the lake following liming was hatched from the sediment inoculum
experiment. A freeze core from Njupfatet was dated by 210Pb
and
carbonaceous fly-ash particle profiles were also determined for Njupfatet
and Sjösjön, which provided an approximate
chronology for the latter lake. Diatom analyses were made of the three
lakes
and pH and dissolved organic carbon inferred using
weighted averaging methodology. Njupfatet had no planktonic diatoms over
the
last 200–300 years, and was dominated by benthic
diatoms, but the diatom-inferred pH suggests that the lake was acidified
to
pH < 5 prior to liming in 1989. Both Djuptjärn and Sjösjön
were dominated by planktonic diatoms, and were acidifying from (c.
1970) prior to liming, Sjösjön from pH 6 to ∼ 5 and Djuptjärn
from 6·5 to ∼ 5·5. These pH inferences suggest that at
least some
lakes in this region are susceptible to atmospheric acidification. The
response
of the diatoms to liming is discussed, in particular the rapid expansion
at
Njupfatet, of Cyclotella glomerata a diatom which was also
present in Sjösjön for a period prior to acidification, and at
other
lakes in south-west Sweden. Possible reasons for the expansion of this
small centric diatom are discussed.