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Dive into the research topics where Jean-Philippe Jenny is active.

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Featured researches published by Jean-Philippe Jenny.


Ecology | 2013

Local forcings affect lake zooplankton vulnerability and response to climate warming

Benjamin Alric; Jean-Philippe Jenny; Vincent Berthon; Fabien Arnaud; Cécile Pignol; Jean-Louis Reyss; Pierre Sabatier; Marie-Elodie Perga

While considerable insights on the ecological consequences of climate change have been gained from studies conducted on remote lakes, little has been done on lakes under direct human exposure. Ecosystem vulnerability and responses to climate warming might yet largely depend on the ecological state and thus on local anthropogenic pressures. We tested this hypothesis through a paleolimnological approach on three temperate large lakes submitted to rather similar climate warming but varying intensities of analogous local forcings (changes in nutrient inputs and fisheries management practices). Changes in the structure of the cladoceran community were considered as revealing for alterations, over the time, of the pelagic food web. Trajectories of the cladoceran communities were compared among the three study lakes (Lakes Geneva, Bourget, and Annecy) over the last 70-150 years. Generalized additive models were used to develop a hierarchical understanding of the respective roles of local stressors and climate warming in structuring cladoceran communities. The cladoceran communities were not equally affected by climate warming between lakes. In Lake Annecy, which is the most nutrient-limited, the cladoceran community was essentially controlled by local stressors, with very limited impact of climate. In contrast, the more nutrient-loaded Lakes Geneva and Bourget were more sensitive to climate warming, although the magnitude of their responses and the pathways under which climate warming affected the communities varied between the two lakes. Finally, our results demonstrated that lake vulnerability and responses to climate warming are modulated by lake trophic status but can also be altered by fisheries management practices through changes in fish predation pressure.


Applied and Environmental Microbiology | 2011

Quantitative PCR enumeration of total/toxic Planktothrix rubescens and total cyanobacteria in preserved DNA isolated from lake sediments.

Olga Savichtcheva; Didier Debroas; Rainer Kurmayer; Clement Villar; Jean-Philippe Jenny; Fabien Arnaud; Marie-Elodie Perga; Isabelle Domaizon

ABSTRACT The variability of spatial distribution and the determinism of cyanobacterial blooms, as well as their impact at the lake scale, are still not understood, partly due to the lack of long-term climatic and environmental monitoring data. The paucity of these data can be alleviated by the use of proxy data from high-resolution sampling of sediments. Coupling paleolimnological and molecular tools and using biomarkers such as preserved DNA are promising approaches, although they have not been performed often enough so far. In our study, a quantitative PCR (qPCR) technique was applied to enumerate total cyanobacterial and total and toxic Planktothrix communities in preserved DNA derived from sediments of three lakes located in the French Alps (Lake Geneva, Lake Bourget, and Lake Annecy), containing a wide range of cyanobacterial species. Preserved DNA from lake sediments was analyzed to assess its quality, quantity, and integrity, with further application for qPCR. We applied the qPCR assay to enumerate the total cyanobacterial community, and multiplex qPCR assays were applied to quantify total and microcystin-producing Planktothrix populations in a single reaction tube. These methods were optimized, calibrated, and applied to sediment samples, and the specificity and reproducibility of qPCR enumeration were tested. Accurate estimation of potential inhibition within sediment samples was performed to assess the sensitivity of such enumeration by qPCR. Some precautions needed for interpreting qPCR results in the context of paleolimnological approaches are discussed. We concluded that the qPCR assay can be used successfully for the analysis of lake sediments when DNA is well preserved in order to assess the presence and dominance of cyanobacterial and Planktothrix communities.


Global Biogeochemical Cycles | 2014

Inherited hypoxia: A new challenge for reoligotrophicated lakes under global warming

Jean-Philippe Jenny; Fabien Arnaud; Benjamin Alric; Jean-Marcel Dorioz; Pierre Sabatier; Michel Meybeck; Marie-Elodie Perga

The Anthropocene is characterized by a worldwide spread of hypoxia, among other manifestations, which threatens aquatic ecosystem functions, services, and biodiversity. The primary cause of hypoxia onset in recent decades is human-triggered eutrophication. Global warming has also been demonstrated to contribute to the increase of hypoxic conditions. However, the precise role of both environmental forcings on hypoxia dynamics over the long term remains mainly unknown due to a lack of historical monitoring. In this study, we used an innovative paleolimnological approach on three large European lakes to quantify past hypoxia dynamics and to hierarchies the contributions of climate and nutrients. Even for lake ecosystems that have been well oxygenated over a millennia-long period, and regardless of past climatic fluctuations, a shift to hypoxic conditions occurred in the 1950s in response to an unprecedented rise in total phosphorus concentrations above 105 mu g P L-1. Following this shift, hypoxia never disappeared despite the fact that environmental policies succeeded in drastically reducing lake phosphorus concentrations. During that period, decadal fluctuations in hypoxic volume were great, ranging between 0.5 and 8% of the total lake volumes. We demonstrate, through statistical modeling, that these fluctuations were essentially driven by climatic factors, such as river discharge and air temperature. In lakes Geneva and Bourget, which are fed by large river systems, fluctuations in hypoxic volume were negatively correlated with river discharge. In contrast, the expansion of hypoxia has been related only to warmer air temperatures at Annecy, which is fed by small river systems. Hence, we outline a theoretical framework assuming that restored lake ecosystems have inherited hypoxia from the eutrophication period and have shifted to a new stable state with new key controls of water and ecosystem quality. We suggest that controlling river discharge may be a complementary strategy for local management of lakes fed by large river systems.


Frontiers in Ecology and Evolution | 2015

High-resolution paleolimnology opens new management perspectives for lakes adaptation to climate warming

Marie-Elodie Perga; Victor Frossard; Jean-Philippe Jenny; Benjamin Alric; Fabien Arnaud; Vincent Berthon; Jessica Black; Isabelle Domaizon; Charline Giguet-Covex; Amy Kirkham; Michel Magny; Marina Manca; Aldo Marchetto; Laurent Millet; Christine Paillès; Cécile Pignol; Jérôme Poulenard; Jean-Louis Reyss; Frédéric Rimet; Olga Savichtcheva; Pierre Sabatier; Florence Sylvestre; Valérie Verneaux

Varved lake sediments provide opportunities for high-resolution paleolimnological investigations that may extend monitoring surveys in order to target priority management actions under climate warming. This paper provides the synthesis of an international research program relying on >150 years-long, varved records for three managed perialpine lakes in Europe (Lakes Geneva, Annecy and Bourget). The dynamics of the dominant, local human pressures, as well as the ecological responses in the pelagic, benthic and littoral habitats were reconstructed using classical and newly developed paleo-proxies. Statistical modelling achieved the hierarchization of the drivers of their ecological trajectories. All three lakes underwent different levels of eutrophication in the first half of the XXth century, followed by re-oligotrophication. Climate warming came along with a 2°C increase in air temperature over the last century, to which lakes were unequally thermally vulnerable. Unsurprisingly, phosphorous concentration has been the dominant ecological driver over the last century. Yet, other human-influenced, local environmental drivers (fisheries management practices, river regulations) have also significantly inflected ecological trajectories. Climate change has been impacting all habitats at rates that, in some cases, exceeded those of local factors. The amplitude and ecological responses to similar climate change varied between lakes, but, at least for pelagic habitats, rather depended on the intensity of local human pressures than on the thermal effect of climate change. Deep habitats yet showed higher sensitivity to climate change but substantial influence of river flows. As a consequence, adapted local management strategies, fully integrating nutrient inputs, fisheries management and hydrological regulations, may enable mitigating the deleterious consequences of ongoing climate change on these ecosystems.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2016

Urban point sources of nutrients were the leading cause for the historical spread of hypoxia across European lakes

Jean-Philippe Jenny; Alexandre Normandeau; Pierre Francus; Zofia E. Taranu; Irene Gregory-Eaves; François Lapointe; Josué J. Jautzy; Antti E.K. Ojala; Jean-Marcel Dorioz; Arndt Schimmelmann; Bernd Zolitschka

Significance Using a compilation of data arising from over 1,500 European watersheds, we have identified the relative role of different drivers in initiating hypolimnetic hypoxia, a critical indicator of lake health. In particular, our regional synthesis of laminated lake sediments indicated a significant acceleration in the spread of lacustrine hypoxia in the 1900s, which occurred well before the general use of commercial fertilizers in the mid-20th century and the onset of supraregional climate warming in the 1970s. The spread of hypoxia was best explained by urban expansion and the associated intensification of anthropogenic point sources of phosphorus, whereby changes in lifestyle increased the discharge of nutrients from treated and raw sewage, and ultimately led to enhanced lacustrine biological productivity. Enhanced phosphorus (P) export from land into streams and lakes is a primary factor driving the expansion of deep-water hypoxia in lakes during the Anthropocene. However, the interplay of regional scale environmental stressors and the lack of long-term instrumental data often impede analyses attempting to associate changes in land cover with downstream aquatic responses. Herein, we performed a synthesis of data that link paleolimnological reconstructions of lake bottom-water oxygenation to changes in land cover/use and climate over the past 300 years to evaluate whether the spread of hypoxia in European lakes was primarily associated with enhanced P exports from growing urbanization, intensified agriculture, or climatic change. We showed that hypoxia started spreading in European lakes around CE 1850 and was greatly accelerated after CE 1900. Socioeconomic changes in Europe beginning in CE 1850 resulted in widespread urbanization, as well as a larger and more intensively cultivated surface area. However, our analysis of temporal trends demonstrated that the onset and intensification of lacustrine hypoxia were more strongly related to the growth of urban areas than to changes in agricultural areas and the application of fertilizers. These results suggest that anthropogenically triggered hypoxia in European lakes was primarily caused by enhanced P discharges from urban point sources. To date, there have been no signs of sustained recovery of bottom-water oxygenation in lakes following the enactment of European water legislation in the 1970s to 1980s, and the subsequent decrease in domestic P consumption.


Global Biogeochemical Cycles | 2016

A century of human-driven changes in the carbon dioxide concentration of lakes

Marie-Elodie Perga; Stephen C. Maberly; Jean-Philippe Jenny; Benjamin Alric; Cécile Pignol; Emmanuel Naffrechoux

Now that evasion of carbon dioxide (CO2) from inland waters is accounted for in global carbon models, it is crucial to quantify how these fluxes have changed in the past and forecast how they may alter in the future in response to local and global change. Here we developed a sediment proxy for the concentration of summer surface dissolved CO2 concentration and used it to reconstruct changes over the past 150 years for three large lakes that have been affected by climate warming, changes in nutrient load, and detrital terrigenous supplies. Initially CO2 neutral to the atmosphere, all three lakes subsequently fluctuated between near equilibrium and supersaturation. Although catchment inputs have supplied CO2 to the lakes, internal processes and reallocation have ultimately regulated decadal changes in lake surface CO2 concentration. Nutrient concentration has been the dominant driver of CO2 variability for a century although the reproducible, nonmonotonic relationship of CO2 to nutrient concentration suggests an interplay between metabolic and chemical processes. Yet for two of these lakes, climatic control of CO2 concentrations has been important over the last 30 years, promoting higher surface CO2 concentrations, likely by decreasing hypolimnetic carbon storage. This new approach offers the unique opportunity to scale, a posteriori, the long-term impact of human activities on lake CO2.


Environmental Science & Technology | 2015

Historical Profiles of PCB in Dated Sediment Cores Suggest Recent Lake Contamination through the “Halo Effect”

Emmanuel Naffrechoux; Nathalie Cottin; Cécile Pignol; Fabien Arnaud; Jean-Philippe Jenny; Marie-Elodie Perga

We investigated the major sources of polychlorinated biphenyls (PCB) and interpreted the environmental fate processes of these persistent organic pollutants in the past and current PCB contamination of three large, urbanized, French peri-alpine lakes. Dated sediment cores were analyzed in order to reconstruct and compare the historical contamination in all three lakes. Stratigraphic changes of PCB contents and fluxes were considered as revealing the temporal dynamics of PCB deposition to the lakes and the distribution of the seven indicator congeners (further referred to as PCBi) as an indicator of the main contamination origin and pathway. Although located within a single PCB industrial production region, concentration profiles for the three lakes differed in timing, peak concentration magnitudes, and in the PCBi congeners compositions. PCBi fluxes to the sediment and the magnitude of the temporal changes were generally much lower in Lake Annecy (0.05-2 ng·cm(-2)·yr(-1)) as compared to Lakes Geneva (0.05-5 ng·cm(-2)·yr(-1)) and Bourget (5-290 ng·cm(-2)·yr(-1)). For all three lakes, the paramount contamination occurred in the early 1970s. In Lakes Annecy and Bourget, PCB fluxes have declined and plateaued at 0.5 and 8 ng·cm(-2)·yr(-1), respectively, since the early 1990s. In Lake Geneva, PCB fluxes have further decreased by the end of the XX(th) century and are now very low. For the most contaminated lake (Lake Bourget), the high PCBi flux (5-290 ng·cm(-2)·yr(-1)) and the predominance of heavy congeners for most of the time period are consistent with a huge local input to the lake. This still high rate of Lake Bourget is explained by transport of suspended solids from one of its affluents, polluted by an industrial point source. Intermediate historical levels and PCBi distribution over time for Lake Geneva suggest a mixed contamination (urban point sources and distant atmospheric transport), while atmospheric deposition to Lake Annecy explains its lowest contamination rate. The presently low contamination levels recorded in Lake Geneva correspond to atmospheric inputs, but the recent PCBi distribution of Lake Annecy, enriched in relatively heavy congeners, reveals a contamination by the neighboring Lake Bourget, following a halo effect of about 40 km radius.


Global Change Biology | 2016

Global spread of hypoxia in freshwater ecosystems during the last three centuries is caused by rising local human pressure.

Jean-Philippe Jenny; Pierre Francus; Alexandre Normandeau; François Lapointe; Marie-Elodie Perga; Antti E.K. Ojala; Arndt Schimmelmann; Bernd Zolitschka


Limnology and Oceanography | 2013

A spatiotemporal investigation of varved sediments highlights the dynamics of hypolimnetic hypoxia in a large hard-water lake over the last 150 years

Jean-Philippe Jenny; Fabien Arnaud; Jean-Marcel Dorioz; Charline Giguet Covex; Victor Frossard; Pierre Sabatier; Laurent Millet; Jean-Louis Reyss; Kazuyo Tachikawa; Edouard Bard; Cécile Pignol; Fayçal Soufi; Olivier Romeyer; Marie-Elodie Perga


Journal of Limnology | 2013

Trophic history of French sub-alpine lakes over the last ~150 years: phosphorus reconstruction and assessment of taphonomic biases

Vincent Berthon; Aldo Marchetto; Frédéric Rimet; Emmanuelle Dormia; Jean-Philippe Jenny; Cécile Pignol; Marie-Elodie Perga

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Fabien Arnaud

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Marie-Elodie Perga

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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Cécile Pignol

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Pierre Sabatier

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Jean-Marcel Dorioz

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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Benjamin Alric

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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Laurent Millet

University of Franche-Comté

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Victor Frossard

University of Franche-Comté

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