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A midge-salinity transfer function for inferring sea level change and landscape evolution in the Hudson Bay Lowlands,Manitoba, Canada
Authors:Trapper R. Dickson  Darren G. Bos  Marlow G. Pellatt  Ian R. Walker
Affiliation:1. Biology, Earth and Environmental Sciences, University of British Columbia, Okanagan Campus, Kelowna, BC, V1V1V7, Canada
2. Parks Canada Agency, Natural Resource Conservation Branch, 300-300 West Georgia Street, Vancouver, BC, V6B6B4, Canada
3. School of Resource and Environmental Management, Simon Fraser University, Burnaby, BC, V5A1S6, Canada
Abstract:We compared water chemistry and environmental data with midge assemblage data, using multivariate analysis to assess the environmental gradients that limit midge (Chironomidae, Chaoboridae and Ceratopogonidae) distributions in the Hudson Bay Lowlands, northeastern Manitoba, Canada. Midge remains, comprising 62 taxa, were obtained from surficial sediments of 63 ponds. Ponds were sampled to maximize the salinity gradient. Specific conductance ranged from 46 to 29,000 μS cm?1. Proximity to the coast was a principal determinant of pond salinity, with ponds closer to Hudson Bay shoreline more saline that those farther away. Multivariate analysis indicated that midge distributions have a significant relationship ( $ {text{r}}_{text{boot}}^{2} = 0.68 $ ) with salinity in the data set. This work will allow paleolimnological inferences of midge community responses to changing sea level (i.e. salinity) via isostatic rebound within the Hudson Bay Lowlands, and will provide essential limnological information to scientists and managers in a region where understanding of aquatic ecosystems is limited. One undescribed midge taxon was dominant in ponds with the highest salinities and may be a key indicator for inferring highly saline environments.
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