2021
DOI: 10.1080/10402381.2021.1992544
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Marked blue discoloration of late winter ice and water due to autumn blooms of cyanobacteria

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Cited by 7 publications
(3 citation statements)
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“…Blooms that were initiated in warmer water temperatures case study. Haig et al (2022) serve as a case study for blooms initiated in warm water that persist into cold temperatures. Shoreline blooms of Aphanizomenon flos-aquae were observed in October 2020 in Pasqua Lake, Canada and were subsequently frozen within littoral ice during late fall-early winter.…”
Section: Other Factors Contributing To Cold-water Cyanobacterial Bloomsmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Blooms that were initiated in warmer water temperatures case study. Haig et al (2022) serve as a case study for blooms initiated in warm water that persist into cold temperatures. Shoreline blooms of Aphanizomenon flos-aquae were observed in October 2020 in Pasqua Lake, Canada and were subsequently frozen within littoral ice during late fall-early winter.…”
Section: Other Factors Contributing To Cold-water Cyanobacterial Bloomsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In Lake Taihu (China), winter blooms of a cold‐tolerant strain of Microcystis were largely attributed to remnant fall blooms that formed when temperatures were warmer rather than arising after temperatures became cold (Ma et al 2016). Observations of blue‐stained water and blue‐stained littoral ice in a eutrophic prairie lake in Canada were the result of a late fall surface bloom of A. flos‐aquae that was trapped in the ice (Haig et al 2022). Although these blooms were not initiated in cold temperatures, their endurance in cold water temperatures is important in understanding how blooms form, persist, senesce, and their role in winter limnology.…”
Section: Types Of Cold‐water Cyanobacterial Blooms: Modes Of Developmentmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Although accurate, laboratory methods are less suitable for real‐time monitoring or long‐term observations due to logistic and economic constraints (Gregor and Maršálek 2004). Given this limitation, as well as the current absence of daily high‐spatial‐resolution satellite observations for small inland waters (Haig et al 2022), in vivo fluorometry has been promoted as an important option for real‐time monitoring of HABs in small water bodies (Richardson et al 2010; Poxleitner et al 2016; Silva et al 2016; Wang et al 2016; Karpowicz and Ejsmont‐Karabin 2017). However, to date, few studies have critically evaluated the capabilities or limitations of buoy‐based instrument platforms in estimating changes in freshwater Chl a concentrations (Bertone et al 2018; Boss et al 2018; Chaffin et al 2018).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%