35 research outputs found

    From the Allerød to the mid-Holocene: Palynological evidence from the south basin of the Caspian Sea

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    This article has been made available through the Brunel Open Access Publishing Fund. Copyright @ The Authors. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-No Derivative Works License, which permits non-commercial use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.Pollen and dinoflagellate cysts have been analysed in a core from the south basin of the Caspian Sea, providing a picture of respectively past vegetation and water salinity for the Late Pleistocene to middle Holocene. A relatively sharp lithological change at 0.86 m depth reflects a shift from detrital silts to carbonates-rich fine silts. From this depth upwards, a Holocene chronology is built based on ten radiocarbon dates on ostracod shells and bulk carbonates. From the vegetation point of view, the Late Pleistocene deserts and steppes were partially replaced in the most sheltered areas by an open woodland with Pinus, Juniperus-Hippophae-Elaeagnus and even Alnus-Quercus-Pterocarya and Fraxinus, related to the Allerød palynozone. This was interrupted by the Younger Dryas palynozone when Artemisia reaches a maximum in a first instance followed by a very dry phase with only a slight return of Pinus and Quercus and the rare presence of Ulmus-Zelkova. From 11.5 to 8.4 cal. ka BP, an open landscape dominated by shrubs such as Ephedra and progressively increasing Quercus appeared. The final spread of diverse evergreen and deciduous trees is delayed and occurs after 8.4 cal. ka BP. It is suggested that this delay is caused by an arid climate in the Early Holocene linked to high insolation and perhaps to a lake effect. The dinocyst assemblages fluctuate between slightly brackish (Pyxidinopsis psilata and Spiniferites cruciformis, 7 psu and lower) and more brackish (Impagidinium caspienense, ∼13 psu). In the Lateglacial (Khvalynian highstand), the assemblages remained dominated by relative low salinity taxa. A late and brief increase of salinity occurred prior to 11.2 cal. ka BP associated with the Mangyshlak lowstand. It is suggested that it was caused by a brief drop in meltwater flow from both the north and the southeast (Uzboy) and a likely evaporation increase. This lowstand occurs quasi at the same time as the end of a longer lowstand in the Black Sea. The freshest waters are then inferred as having occurred between 8.4 and ≤4.4 cal. ka BP, linked to a connection with the Amu Darya and the melting glaciers on the Pamir Mountains. The Caspian Sea is a sensitive environment, easily perturbed by global climatic changes, such as the Allerød and Holocene warming, and the Lateglacial and Younger Dryas cooling, as well as by regional changes in its hydrography, such as shifts in the Eurasian meltwater and the Volga and Amu Darya inflows.Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique, Franc

    The diatom Thalassiosira faurii (Gasse) Hasle in the Ziway-Shala lakes (Ethiopia) and implications for paleoclimatic reconstructions: Case study of the Glacial-Holocene transition in East Africa

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    International audienceThe species Thalassiosira faurii (Gasse) Hasle was found dominating the planktonic diatom community during summer 2012 in lake Langano which is part of the Ziway-Shalla alkaline lake system in Ethiopia. In a previous study, the species had been recorded in high abundance in 13-12 cal. ka old sediments from the neighbour lake Abiyata. Using a transfer function for conductivity, peaks in abundance had been interpreted as dry spells at the Pleistocene-Holocene transition since the species was considered strictly halophilous. In this study, a strain of T. faurii was isolated from lake Langano and grown in the laboratory. The observation of its morphology and reproduction, and comparison between modern and fossil populations helped to improve the taxonomic definition of the species. The autecology of the species was also investigated through a salinity tolerance test. The results revealed that the species was much more sensitive to salinity than previously admitted. A new conductivity optimum was derived from the experiment and incorporated into the transfer function. The reassessment of lake conductivity variations along the core of lake Abiyata showed that the intensity of the dry periods preceding the onset of the Holocene had been probably overestimated

    Identification of an epiphytic diatom on Nitzschia sigmoidea (Bacillariophyceae)

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    International audienceEpiphytism on benthic motile diatoms is not common and can be considered a phoretic habitat. Nitzschia sigmoidea is a very long diatom which often exhibits epiphytes on its frustule. It was found abundantly in a small regulated stream in Provence and about half of the individuals had a variable number of adnate epiphytes on them. Examination of fresh material under a scanning electron microscope revealed that the epiphytes were diatoms belonging to the species Fallacia helensis. This species had not been reported as epiphytes on other diatoms before. More research is needed to understand the relationship between the two species and, more generally, to investigate phoretic epiphytism as an original biotic interaction between diatoms
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