Land-Water Connectivity Drives Northern Lake Biogeochemistry

Gabrielle Hatten

Lakes: A Reflection of Their Landscape 

Background. In the lake-abundant Northwest Territories, Canada, permafrost thaw is threatening the stability of lake biogeochemistry and the role these lakes play in fragile and unique ecosystems. However, the high degree of landscape heterogeneity across the subarctic and arctic suggests that lakes may respond differently to permafrost thaw. Of particular interest is the varying ability to support microbial activity. High levels of microbial activity are tied to more humic organic matter and higher nutrient content and can result in the production of greenhouse gases.

Approach. In this work, we aim to explore how permafrost landforms relate to lake water biogeochemistry. In late summer 2023, we sampled 68 lakes spanning a latitudinal gradient of 10 degrees in the Northwest Territories for lake biogeochemistry. Multivariate regression trees were used to determine the most important landscape variables driving dissolved organic matter composition, physico-chemical properties, and trace metal concentrations. Principal component analyses were used to visually explore variation with lake groups determined by the multivariate regression trees. 

Results. Our results showed that landscape factors differently impact lake properties, with thermokarst formation and vegetation strongly influencing organic matter composition and physico-chemical properties yet exhibiting little influence over trace metal concentrations. Ground ice and permafrost zone did not seem to have a substantial impact on lake water relative to vegetation cover, thermokarst formation, and ecodistrict. The relationships between landscape features and lake biogeochemistry established with the multivariate regression trees were used to predict lakes with the potential for high rates of microbial activity. Further lake sampling will be required to confirm these predictions. Our study highlights the importance of incorporating landscape factors into studies on freshwater ecosystems and using a wide range of water biogeochemistry variables.

Land Acknowledgement

I would like to acknowledge and give thanks that I am situated on the Traditional Territories and present-day homeland of many First Nation, Metis, and Inuit Peoples. Edmonton, Alberta lies within Treaty 6 Territory and the traditional lands of many First Peoples, including the Cree, Blackfoot, Métis, Nakota Sioux, Iroquois, and Ojibway/ Saulteaux/Anishinaabe. 

Lakes included in this study fall within Treaty 11 Territory and unceded territories in the present-day Northwest Territories, the lands of the Inuvialuit, Gwich’in, Sahtu Dene and Metis, Decho, and Tłı̨chǫ Peoples.


This project is managed by the Government of the Northwest Territories and Aurora Research Institute, with financial support from Polar Knowledge Canada.