Abstract

Risk based management of aquatic resources for ecosystem and public health requires water managers and health professionals to work together. Using an epidemiologic time-series modelling approach, we assess patterns of risk for alert-level cyanobacterial abundance with water temperature. We focus on six sites along the Murray–Darling Drainage Basin, using the longest continuous record of algal abundance in Australia. Alert-level cyanobacterial abundance showed a non-linear and lagged response to water temperature across all six sites, after controlling for relative water discharge. For three sites there was a positive relationship of high-water temperature with the risk of alert-level abundance. These three sites also showed a substantial lagged effect, with the risk remaining high at a lag of 1 month following high water temperatures. The higher than average risk of alert-level cyanobacterial abundance with extreme water temperature and the persistence of this effect for 1 month highlight the applicability of these models to understand non-linear and time-dependent relationships in complex systems which are managed for ecosystem and population health. The site-specific relationships provide guidance for local authorities to develop water quality-related environmental and public health responses to a variable climate.

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