Assessing the impact of aquaculture on the Seven Lakes of San Pablo, Philippines, using palaeolimnology

In the Philippines, aquaculture in freshwater lakes contributes significantly to its economy, food security and employment. However, intensive aquaculture often leads to degradation in lake ecosystem integrity because of nutrient fertilisation resulting in harmful algal blooms (HABs), eutrophication...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Briddon, Charlotte
Format: Thesis (University of Nottingham only)
Language:English
Published: 2021
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/64343/
_version_ 1848800119856562176
author Briddon, Charlotte
author_facet Briddon, Charlotte
author_sort Briddon, Charlotte
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
description In the Philippines, aquaculture in freshwater lakes contributes significantly to its economy, food security and employment. However, intensive aquaculture often leads to degradation in lake ecosystem integrity because of nutrient fertilisation resulting in harmful algal blooms (HABs), eutrophication and degradation of water quality. The few limnological and palaeolimnological studies carried out on Philippine lakes demonstrate a link between aquaculture activity and degraded water quality but there is a lack of information to help define how lakes have reacted over time to changing intensities of aquaculture and other catchment effects. This research attempts to redress this imbalance by using two different palaeolimnological approaches to assess the impact of aquaculture on six of the Seven Lakes of San Pablo (Luzon Island). Both approaches used multiple proxies, specifically, chlorophyll and carotenoid pigments, carbon and nitrogen isotopes (δ13C, δ15N) and C/N ratios to help disentangle lake-specific effects of aquaculture from the impacts of regional drivers. The first approach used generalised additive models (GAMs) to assess responses of lakes along an aquaculture disturbance gradient and hence whether lake response was proportional to the level of aquaculture. The second approach endeavoured to quantify the extent to which aquaculture (and other drivers) led to change in algal communities using variance partitioning analysis. Using this whole-ecosystem “experimental design” across individual lakes allowed for a more critical interpretation of the pigment and isotopic records. Both approaches concluded that there was no proportional relationship between changes in the proxy record and level of aquaculture disturbance, suggesting aquaculture is not the main driver of change. Land use changes (since 1950) explained the greatest proportion of variance and corresponded to periods of significant temporal change indicating it was a more dominant driver of change in algal communities. As aquaculture intensity increased, lakes became more eutrophic and anoxia increased due to nutrient enrichment from a combination of anthropogenic (urbanisation, coconut plantations and aquaculture) and climatic factors. In the majority of the lakes, changes in the proxy records predate the introduction of aquaculture, providing evidence that aquaculture exacerbated pre-existing change especially in the lakes with the highest aquaculture disturbance. Furthermore, each lake had a distinctive response to aquaculture due to the impact of multiple stressors (climate, land use and aquaculture) especially on the high disturbance lakes, and the modification by individual lake characteristics such as hydro-morphology. Mitigation strategies, therefore, need to be specifically developed for each lake, with consideration given to their distinct morphological features and how this influences their complex response to aquaculture and other environmental pressures.
first_indexed 2025-11-14T20:46:30Z
format Thesis (University of Nottingham only)
id nottingham-64343
institution University of Nottingham Malaysia Campus
institution_category Local University
language English
last_indexed 2025-11-14T20:46:30Z
publishDate 2021
recordtype eprints
repository_type Digital Repository
spelling nottingham-643432025-02-28T15:10:13Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/64343/ Assessing the impact of aquaculture on the Seven Lakes of San Pablo, Philippines, using palaeolimnology Briddon, Charlotte In the Philippines, aquaculture in freshwater lakes contributes significantly to its economy, food security and employment. However, intensive aquaculture often leads to degradation in lake ecosystem integrity because of nutrient fertilisation resulting in harmful algal blooms (HABs), eutrophication and degradation of water quality. The few limnological and palaeolimnological studies carried out on Philippine lakes demonstrate a link between aquaculture activity and degraded water quality but there is a lack of information to help define how lakes have reacted over time to changing intensities of aquaculture and other catchment effects. This research attempts to redress this imbalance by using two different palaeolimnological approaches to assess the impact of aquaculture on six of the Seven Lakes of San Pablo (Luzon Island). Both approaches used multiple proxies, specifically, chlorophyll and carotenoid pigments, carbon and nitrogen isotopes (δ13C, δ15N) and C/N ratios to help disentangle lake-specific effects of aquaculture from the impacts of regional drivers. The first approach used generalised additive models (GAMs) to assess responses of lakes along an aquaculture disturbance gradient and hence whether lake response was proportional to the level of aquaculture. The second approach endeavoured to quantify the extent to which aquaculture (and other drivers) led to change in algal communities using variance partitioning analysis. Using this whole-ecosystem “experimental design” across individual lakes allowed for a more critical interpretation of the pigment and isotopic records. Both approaches concluded that there was no proportional relationship between changes in the proxy record and level of aquaculture disturbance, suggesting aquaculture is not the main driver of change. Land use changes (since 1950) explained the greatest proportion of variance and corresponded to periods of significant temporal change indicating it was a more dominant driver of change in algal communities. As aquaculture intensity increased, lakes became more eutrophic and anoxia increased due to nutrient enrichment from a combination of anthropogenic (urbanisation, coconut plantations and aquaculture) and climatic factors. In the majority of the lakes, changes in the proxy records predate the introduction of aquaculture, providing evidence that aquaculture exacerbated pre-existing change especially in the lakes with the highest aquaculture disturbance. Furthermore, each lake had a distinctive response to aquaculture due to the impact of multiple stressors (climate, land use and aquaculture) especially on the high disturbance lakes, and the modification by individual lake characteristics such as hydro-morphology. Mitigation strategies, therefore, need to be specifically developed for each lake, with consideration given to their distinct morphological features and how this influences their complex response to aquaculture and other environmental pressures. 2021-08-04 Thesis (University of Nottingham only) NonPeerReviewed application/pdf en arr https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/64343/1/PhD_Thesis_Corrected_Version_Charlotte_BRIDDON_14284680.pdf Briddon, Charlotte (2021) Assessing the impact of aquaculture on the Seven Lakes of San Pablo, Philippines, using palaeolimnology. PhD thesis, University of Nottingham. palaeolimnology freshwater lakes aquaculture ecosystems aquaculture
spellingShingle palaeolimnology
freshwater lakes
aquaculture
ecosystems
aquaculture
Briddon, Charlotte
Assessing the impact of aquaculture on the Seven Lakes of San Pablo, Philippines, using palaeolimnology
title Assessing the impact of aquaculture on the Seven Lakes of San Pablo, Philippines, using palaeolimnology
title_full Assessing the impact of aquaculture on the Seven Lakes of San Pablo, Philippines, using palaeolimnology
title_fullStr Assessing the impact of aquaculture on the Seven Lakes of San Pablo, Philippines, using palaeolimnology
title_full_unstemmed Assessing the impact of aquaculture on the Seven Lakes of San Pablo, Philippines, using palaeolimnology
title_short Assessing the impact of aquaculture on the Seven Lakes of San Pablo, Philippines, using palaeolimnology
title_sort assessing the impact of aquaculture on the seven lakes of san pablo, philippines, using palaeolimnology
topic palaeolimnology
freshwater lakes
aquaculture
ecosystems
aquaculture
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/64343/