Laura‐Lee Sam’s scientific contributions

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Publications (1)


Limited recovery following a massive seagrass decline in subarctic eastern Canada
  • Article

October 2022

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179 Reads

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20 Citations

Global Change Biology

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Mary I. O’Connor

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Murray M. Humphries

Over the last few decades, there has been an increasing recognition for seagrasses' contribution to the functioning of nearshore ecosystems and climate change mitigation. Nevertheless, seagrass ecosystems have been deteriorating globally at an accelerating rate during recent decades. In 2017, research into the condition of eelgrass (Zostera marina) along the eastern coast of James Bay, Canada, was initiated in response to reports of eelgrass decline by the Cree First Nations of Eeyou Istchee. As part of this research, we compiled and analyzed two decades of eelgrass cover data and three decades of eelgrass monitoring data (biomass and density) to detect changes and assess possible environmental drivers. We detected a major decline in eelgrass condition between 1995 and 1999, which encompassed the entire east coast of James Bay. Surveys conducted in 2019 and 2020 indicated limited changes post decline, e.g., low eelgrass cover (<25%), low aboveground biomass, smaller shoots than before 1995, and marginally low densities persisted at most sites. Overall, the synthesized datasets show a 40 % loss of eelgrass meadows with > 50% cover in eastern James Bay since 1995, representing the largest scale eelgrass decline documented in eastern Canada since the massive die-off event that occurred in the 1930s along the North Atlantic coast. Using biomass data collected since 1982, but geographically limited to the sector of the coast near the regulated La Grande River, generalized additive modeling revealed eelgrass meadows are affected by local sea surface temperature, early ice breakup and higher summer freshwater discharge. Our results caution against assuming subarctic seagrass ecosystems have avoided recent global declines or will benefit from ongoing climate warming.

Citations (1)


... After 50 years, oceanographic studies in James Bay have begun anew (Mundy, 2021;Peck et al., 2022;Évrard et al., 2023;Meilleur et al., 2023), in part to address community and First Nation concerns about observed environmental changes along coastal areas of the bay, including declines in seagrasses (Zostera marina, commonly known as eelgrass). A recent study found statistical associations between eelgrass biomass and high discharge from the regulated La Grande River (LGR), which discharges into northeast James Bay (NEJB; Leblanc et al., 2023). The objectives of this study are to alleviate persisting baseline data gaps by (1) characterizing the freshwater and nutrient (nitrate and phosphate) distributions, sources and fate in the NEJB coastal area under contemporary flow regimes during summer and winter; and (2) assessing how the modifications to LGR have affected nutrient stocks in the coastal environment. ...

Reference:

Influence of altered freshwater discharge on the seasonality of nutrient distributions near La Grande River, northeastern James Bay, Québec
Limited recovery following a massive seagrass decline in subarctic eastern Canada
  • Citing Article
  • October 2022

Global Change Biology