“…Surface water quality is also affected by variations in hydro-climatic conditions (Durance and Ormerod, 2010) and nutrient availability is not the only limiting factor of phytoplanktonic growth in rivers: successful phytoplankton species in rivers are selected based on their ability to survive high-frequency irradiance fluctuations and the important determinants are turbidity (or its impact upon underwater light) and water residence time (Istvánovics and Honti, 2012;Krogstad and Lovstad, 1989;Reynolds and Descy, 1996;Reynolds et al, 1994). In Europe, both climatic models and observations have shown a general rise in air and water temperature since the 1970s (Moatar and Gailhard, 2006;Whitehead et al, 2009;Bustillo et al, 2013), and models predict lower water discharge and rising temperatures during summer, potentially intensifying the risk of eutrophication (Arheimer et al, 2005;Barlocher et al, 2008;Lecerf et al, 2007;Whitehead et al, 2009) as shallow rivers are particularly susceptible (Istvánovics et al, 2014).…”